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Now You Know

'

hUhlde behind LaVerne CollegtO,
ealt of Los Anglea, measuring
340 feet high and t• feet wide.

'

Devoted To The lntere.r.
VOL. XXI . NO 214

•

at y

e

The largeJt permanent ltltt.er
in the world Ia an .. L" on a

enttne

Snow Ourri..--101111-

w_...._,._
Uato
MooiiJo · - rts •.....-_
_H._,~

30L

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25. 196Q

----------------------------------~0

TEN CENTS

"

·~

Work ••
Really liJ
GALLIPOLIS

":" .

5QUAL1. I-lAP AN IPIOTIC VI!&amp; NCr ·
. INTO
MY MIND: 'WHEN IN ·~~i...~EN IN
'!":!liWN
IN CIRCL.ES, 5C~EAM ANI&gt;~~ !'IT KEPT Me:
m,)M POtl&gt;lG TH05e THINGSJ"
-

teonaeora
to "'
tnwnboDeaf"
That'• """ !lui.'

..,., •chedulocl to ~
&lt;IQ', F .... 24, ducriiNj

;:;:::x-.::~::=:::~:=:=~~:=:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::;:;:;::::::::::::::: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::·.::::::;:;:;:::;:;:::::::mtr..-;:::::::::--::::;;::::::::::::::::::;--:=::-;::r.:::::::::--::::;:;:;::::::::::=;:::

aa a mlaalmary at 11
. terloo Cbureb, U, S., I

the dot.. were discussed by Actlug Chief of I'OIIco Paul ParIIOits and Mlddloport V Wage
Council Monday night.

-eocl

And there• a gonna be a erackdownl
Ma¥or C. 0. Fisher, Harold
Chue, maintenance aupeTVisor,
and Ch1et Panona made a tour
a1 the town and dtaoovered trash

"NY work Jiq)ly

aeem like work,"

eJare-, uror

It ~
- ' • roollze the ~
lug lllllaic and pralain!
lbo YOice and wltll au a
ltruments .••
At Klojo Gokuln's .School, Kelly has po
metllod "' teaching alii
play limplo melOdies 1
braaa, woodwind, lllld
-...entB.Thometltao
•'"fmlt~t~ng motorcycle1
em pleees of pntonhoo
a breotb!IJ8 c:oatest.
Wboo Kelly arrived
iD 1957. he had beldad
year dlstlaedahocl DIU

-

111110111 other tlllugo - piled
two feet high at oomo homo a. They

IM&gt;tecl alao buildings in bad coodiUoo and lots grown high in
weeds.

lie-Ins

roer u 110~ ODd
ucator. It ineluded,....

by .L eslie Turner

CAPTAIN EASY

Vi.... _ . , . . . ,
aneea will! tile Jack-.
Orllllllo IIYJIIP)Ioalea Ill
He hao a BS and iliA

IM't'

lwnb!a Ualvoralt;y Toact
logo, and lludlocl at (
Collserntory ~

STIIOLL~

TIIIIU A

Muatc,

WUIIN

Scbool al Muole, Union :

I'M JO AND llNMARRifD!

. WEHO'I, NN PROBLMI
toS TO FINO A PRAC."OCAL
!oiTI1 FOil M'KEE~
NEW PLANT!

. , PAOIU!AI
If OF APERSONAL
N,\TUPII!, CAPTAIN

PEOPLE ARI: tJE61HIJlll&amp;
'TD WONDER A801lT

COLUMBUS (UPO -

.t=I&amp;IITePI Pti.OT. WloiO '1/Af ~ptT
vlmOib·o, 'PIPIEE '/EAR6 AGO! .

F-100

'APTAIN

ltumper.

EA~, 1

MU!io'f

C:llliATE A N~W l.IIA6c 1=01'1
M'lli~l.F TIL~ 'THE I'IIG\IT
~N CCIME!io ALONG!

WOW MAN'I
' PltfiWf AIEI-J

I

ARE Al!ciuHD,
l'IE'NDY1

liE~ FEW! 1 HATE' TO ADiMIT
IT, I!IIIT t'-.fi 8EEiol ~~NDINI!I
FLO'IIEI'I!io 'TD .ll~~fLF PliE ll;Wtilll6
·t IU.~E AoSECRH AD.IIIREPI!

,•

OVB BOARDJ:NG IIO'O'SE
6
880 Cuah

v..a ..,.11

radio, ...,.
IUIII ·blue

t.rior.

Nt

·•od.l

In

64FOID
Covntry S.dan.
automatic trona. Bt
ful medium gren
matching interior.
superior condition.

HE' REJ&gt;..l.LV 16
.
TIME- HE5 WAVIN' HI~
l.IKE IT~ F'HONAV1:51•

ed to enforce the new ordinance
which establiahea penalty for
propert;y owners allowing trash
to accumulate.
Chief Parsons also asked tor
a ruling on parking ticket violations.
Some of!'enders are paying only
25 cents when they have not
paid a ticket promptly. Then
the village has been sending several bills trying to collect the
additional 75 cent. due,
Council advised Chief Parsons
to have one notice of violation

TOO 8P.D THE~
Nar AN 5XF'Etirr
AROUND TO

, ·,.

•.

~•,.

.• ,. ,. ,

._. 8ill _lPa-er•e ·

Sixty-live of 83 pereons comIng to give blood Monday at
Pomeroy elementary 1 c h o o I
were accepted. Eighteen gave re-

'fl!e

~

;. ,

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

,.

Chief Par8011s was instructed
to enforce that legislation also.

Smash
Marine
Camps

Bureau to

SI\IGON

(UPO- North

Viet-

namese soldiers spra~ from
the jungle darkness today and
in human waves smashed into
the two U.S. Marine camps just
below the Demilitarized Zone,
killing 30 Leathernecks &amp;rkl
wounding 115,
Part ot the 40,000-manguerrUIa throat to Saigon bottled U.S.
and South Vietnamese .soldiers
guardillJ the city, despite one or
the heaviest Allied bombarclments ot the war into the
capital's "rocket belt." Shock
waves from the Allied bomba
and shtlls· rOlled aero..- Sailon ·
nlghL ·
A
spokesman aatd 2,000

Be Altered

au

u.s.

Viet Cong and North Vfetna..
mese had perished in the
oaensive since Sunday. But the
Reds gave no sign they were
rood&gt; to give It up. A VIet CO!l8
broadcast said the reprisal
offensive showed how strong the
Communists are.
U.S. 25th Infantry Dlvisloo
soldiers at gun bases protecting
Saigon kUJed 98 guerrlllas In
two battles on approach routes
from cambodia. In one, the
Communists. ftred tear and
nauaea gas into the American
base but the wind blew tt back
at them. U.S, los.ses were ll.gh4
spoke&amp;men said.
Wave upon wave of 852

Ii Ia atreoaocl tllat cmteatante
Glrla lntereatocl In beeemlns
are
ell&amp;lble to enter tile· M I 1 1
conteatante - It to planned 1o

cllimbtr at

be

and: ~.

hl8h achoolll'_.,• by Sop.

year

tembor at tbla
and t11e •
al enlr011t1 em oponln&amp; day a1
llle ....... )10801111 iD Atl..,_
Uc. Clll must bo ~ loll. 11Wn

. 18 Qf·more uw.-28.

·

Elllronta Dlllat bo at IIIOd

~· ~....... ~JI' ....... 1101'-

...-'

Roy T. Kasper, 77, widelY
known utility comJ)811Y empiQNe,
dlocl Monday arter110011 in Vet-

erans Memorial lloo,Pital.

a representative of the Floyd

G. Browne and Associates com~
pany. the village's engineering
flrm on the sewage disposal system. Grate was advised that detailed plans or the system desired by the village will arrive within the next three weeks.
Grate also reported a conversation with an employe of t h e
Morey Constructlon Co., Park ersburg. the firm whi ch built.
the system. He was advlsecl that
gratings, work at Uft stations and
other matters relating to the
system, were discussed. Grate
was advised that Morey will arrive Thursday or Friday to confer on the problems.
Council discussed the recent
airing on television or c o mplalnts about the new dump located in Sallsbury Township.
Councilmen said that the dump
was established in accordance
with new state laws. They observed that residents having complaints about the landfill cllmp
shoold pass them onto their state
officials who pass the laws requiring oue~ clunpo In tho first

.Plac·e.
DUring the discussioo it was
pointed out that burning Ia permUted at &lt;limps until July 1
and then It will also be permitted in certain areas ot dumps.
The landfill operation Js to bury
solid wastes only, they said.
Attending the meeting w e r e
Councilmen Zerkle, Charles
Byer, Stumbo and Dick Vaughan,
Chief Parsons, Mayor Fisher,
Clerk - Treaturer Grate, and
ChaBf!.

of the Ohio Power Co. for

t9'h

years. He was an electrician,
and a member of the Odd Fel lows LOOge and of the Pome-

aa,ytlme.
Mr. Kasper was aasoclated
with early motion picture theaters In Pomeroy for a number

ct. year!.
,.

Asli'$33,950 Damages
claims she has been deprived or

filed in Meigs County CCIIUI\on her h11sband's service, comfort.
pleas oourt Monday oriKIJatod lnd so&lt;lety os tile result of In25. 1987. in .an uto.;noblle aecldent OQ Route 7. Just north ol tht!
Mollo - Gillll Count;y line.
'lbe sui4 fUed by James E.
and Violet Jelfera, Eureka,. GaJ...

i '

other Business
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate
reported that he had talked with

The Odd FellowA will hoJd

in altapd IDJurlea sulferocl Feb.

! 'I

~ jl

lem.

services for Mr. Kasper Tuesday ~;t 8:30 p.m. and Pomeroy
ftremen will hold services Wednesd.a¥ at 7:30 p.m. Friends
n.ay call at the tlmeral home

A ciYil ault asldqr: $l3,950

!l

He was asked to oonvey t h e
problem to the Board of Public
AlJ'airs along with his suggestions on correcting the prob-

roy Firemen's Association.
Mr. Kasper is survived by a
daughter, Edith Perry, Columbusi and a grandda, !ghter, Jotut~
anna Shuler, of ~acuse.
Funeral services wlll be held
Thurlday at 3 p.m. from EwIng Olapei wltll tile Rev. Wilbur Perrin olrldating. Burial
will be in Beech Grove cemetery.

Juries suatalned In the mlahap.

In other court actl'llty, Georp
Kau!f, Rt. 2, Racl,.,, has Wed

DEMONSTRATING - Charlene Lowe of Huntington, Appalachian Power Company homea aalll
representative, right, displays a pizza awetizer she made for Wllhama High School Future Hememakers of America following her talk about educational loan appliances Monday, At her left is
Mrs. Pete Burris, FHA advisor. Seated, waiting for the pizza treat, are Charlotte Grimm and
Debbie Gerlach to r) students.

a

Queen, Nixon, Dine
LONDON (UPI) President
Nixon took Britain's political
and diplomatic temperature at
a series of meetings today with
only a royal lunch al Buckingham Palace to break the
intensive routine of his third
day abroad.
A coz y evening by the fire
wilh Prime Minister Harold
Wilson Monday night set the
stage for detailed ~ks on W81S
to rein!orce Western unity
before the summit meeting
Nixon proposes to hold with the
Soviet Union.
Extremists, hecklers a n d
student hell-raisers fourd theirs
a lost cause as the President
sped swiftly from ooe appointment to another. He apparently

did not even see the relatively of weariness on this second stqt
small ao:l not very angry crowd of his tive-Jation., e~Pt-day
Hotel a s he returned t
hoyrs behind schedule trom a sition- began arrinng at the
d iriner meeting with WHson at hotel for conferences wltb Nixon
Chequers, the prime m inister's prior to a three-hour formal
c ~y estate 40 miles from meeting with Wilson and his
London.
Labor govenunent aides at No.
Seven Arrested
I 0 Downing Street.
Police arrested about seven of
Queen Elizabeth n invited
the .deJnonstratora who over ... N'--·t&lt;r· l•nch . at lluc~
turned a car, set fire to a trash Palace before one format
barrel and waved Viet Cong ceremony, the layillJ of a
Oags before N[xon returned to wreath at the Tf;mb ot the
Claridge's. Of the 1,000 or so Unknown Soldier in Westmi•
who demonstrated, only about ster Abbey.
100 were left when he returned
British spokesmen stressed
to the hotel.
the talks as "free-ranging. wide
The President, getting to bed ranging" and said they ceraered
afler midnight, showed no signs
(CoQ.inued on sage 8)

Or, the strange story of
Democrats liking Mr. Nixon
''satisfactory plus."
Even some or the columnists
who were predictinc that Nixon
would
Gunk
in
the first
seme ster now concede he has a
good chance of making the
honor roll.
Yoo may or may not agree
with these a~raisals. But you
surely

must

have

been sw--

prised, as I was, to fmd them
coming from Democrats.
When
grading
fieiJublican
presidents, Democrats are in..

Procedure to Obtain
Special Tags Noted
Meigs County de)alty regis- daily,
trars of motor vehicles today an~
Holders of 1968 numbers wlll
noun(.'ed procedures to be fol lowed to obtain special ltcense
plates.
William A. Gibbs, Pl&gt;moroy,
said reservstions will be taken
tor special plates from March
I thro.agh March 13. Miss Fred.-

dlo !Ioudaabol~ Middleport, said
that she will accept reserva~
tiona for the special tags from
March 3 throogh March 13 from
the hours of 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.

Alcoholism Project

have unW March 13 to reclaim
their 1968 number for 1969.
The price for residents or
Meigs County will be $10,50 and
applicants will need to know their
1968 number. The owner must
present the certificate of title
or memorarKktm or title when
making application for license
plates.
Many QUo counties, and some
municipalities have enacted a
local motor vehicle tax which

addiUon to tho state u.
cense plate tax. A.n owner who
Is

aD

clined to count off for neatneu
or oth~rwise irdulge in arbitra..
ry fault-finding,
(RepubJicans, of course, tend
to apply the same extraneous
s tarriard s
when
they
are
grading Democratic presidents).
The situation could change
abrl.l)tly , but it is obvious that a
goodly number of people are
having secord thoughts about
Nixon's capabilities.
However, I seldom hear them
admil they maJi have m1staken-ly prejudged the new adminis-tration. To the contrary, the
main ~shot of Nixon's early
showing has been a rapid
increase in the ~ber~ of
the "I told you so" socieQ'.
''I told you Nixon would maQ
a better president than manr
people thought he would," one
new member of the society
remarked the other day.
''That's funny,'" I said. u1
don't remember your telliJW me
anythi~ like that.'"
••wen, maybe 1 didn't say it
out loud, But 1 have felt all
along that he was goi~ to tool
a lot of people,"
.. Ttwn how carne you were
sa,ying last November thlt year.
were thinking about mminc to
Mexico for the next four
years?"
"That had nothi1J8 to do with
Nixon's election. l just hlppenod to have been
!Dr

.._Y

00·-

•7•*

--,

1

Discussed in Meigs

~;.,"";;~:~:

ose,

!

'

tour. Bright and early, Conserw o vative party leaders- the Clp.PO'-

The Lighter
Side •....
By DICK WEST
W/ISHINGTON (UPJ) -- President Nixon ha s been getting
surprisingly high marks on his
first month's report card
I call this surprising because
some or those doing the grading
are Democrats.
Hubert 11. Humphrey, for
instance, gave him a "very
well." Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield gave him an
"excellent" and Speaker John
W. McCormack gave him a

•

of demonstrators near Claridge's

resides In a county or munic- some good hot tamale&amp;..,
hi&amp; petiUon for dl vorce from
tpaii~;y w~lch has enacted sue~
Eleanor Frances Kaufr1 salem.
u A few days after 1he alectlon.
9outhirn O!do . Pioeeant OYOII lla C4luJicy, RIIJles Frank w. O~lo, aod coort roporter Moxlno
a tax Ia subject to the tax re- I AW you rolling I IJ'IPialDIII
thOUII!! a..y ore realclonta at 011\. JII'AIBit 24 Wlnbor Court, PL Price he's been commissioned
prdleas of where the licenH the sidewalk wltlt J'CIUl' DHe.
or ciilea lnd lllltea 001Wclo at l'loonnt, defendant, lo a two to !Ike d'l&gt;Oiitlcmo !rom Jlomy
Weren't you pQiftl oil Ill
T. J. lluyle, ehiof of tile Dl- plates are obtained.
lila Mllsa. G11llo, Walblugton &lt;IUBO action.
Ro.Y Wllllams and Loland Her· vtolon ol Aloobollam, Ohio Deelection bet?••
., addition, - · ol and - . C'&lt;&gt;uldi ~ ~~~­
The plalntl!fa, In the first liert Bea.U In oonnect1011 will! tile partment al Hoaltll, dlac:uoaocl a vehicles used for hlre or in
"Of course no&amp;. I alwQI raU
ocl they are llltandlng a ..,..._
cao..; charp tllat .imos drove nrat decree murder trial o! WU- local project to help C&lt;IDibat al- oom~oo with lilY bullnoaa or grapes that WI)'.,.
or unlverall;y In the !oor..count;y hh automobile acroas the 00~ llam Frederick Wyant slated to · coiJolhm with a small groop branch bualneao -ctocl with"But If )'011 - ~ lilt
area.
terl.l ne and collided will! Mr. · besln Morch :;.
ol Melp Countlana thlo mom- In a ~ or a munlclpallt;y would . makt 1 .....
Last year 17 CCII'Ik:Jatants eom- Jeffers. The plalntJ!fa •hai'IO
which has enacted a local mo-~sltlona aakocl for by De- iDe In the olflce at County Court
W~ did YGOI haW "
IIOtod for 11)0 tltlo. Mlao taur- Mr, Jet&amp;••· lmonc other 11\lur- fenao Attorney J, B. O'Brien of
tor
vehicle tax also lo !lllb.loct to
JUdp Frank W. Portor1 Jr.
lo SciJaefar, OhiO UnlveraitJ otq~ : loa roouiUJW .In ~OO!I . af clom- oilier pfincl~lea In_tile ........,1118
you buyIJu-r
1 - ·II
ll&lt;ijrle rmewocl tile problem aueh tax.
man?'
New jags wtU 110 011 sale Mon- · ·,Athena, bot. o ,Oalclont ol '
ou«erod 1IMd and Internal trial, lncludi~V Borbera Scar- aa It exists In t1!e state a n d
Columbua, - tile UUe.
llllurleo, loceratlona and loaa o1 beJ:ry, Mrs. D&amp;IIM Wylltll, Rol&gt;- coUntv. and diseulsed prospects day, . !~,ore~ 17, al1d vehleleo opIIIJo S&lt;IJufer-later-partln ~in U. accident.
ert Scarberry, Henry st.eveoCut- al • pilot project here !or rtba- ,r,~ · M Oblo hlghwayo Illtile Mill O!do ...............t
ID t11a ••"""" cauae, !or whleh lljl, lluild1 Wyant and Mole Dot.. bUU..Uon ol al'"""'llco with plb- ·~~~. Apffi 15, ..,a! dla))lay . ihe. 1969. u...,.. plalaL
(Cclntllllocl
Ill
IIcflllds.
I~ oouatrt, Mra. Jetr.ro ..., wore not ordered.

,.

- ~~~~--

11 there Ia a problem in the area
or Main and FilU! Sts., and water
must be turned ot.r. residents of
a wide sector are out of water
lDlUl the problem Is corrected,
Chase said.

Roy Kasper, 77, Dies

thy

llnl,, ... ~ Ollll'lof lor ~4'. ~. charln ....
lbo1ttt~
.r'
. ~. ~
.

. _,,

separate otrense.

O!th amual Miu Soothom 'llblo · l&gt;qeant hao been sot
lor 8:10 ·11.m. oa S&amp;turday, April
a, In Poliloi"O,Y. .
~ to l'OIIIeatants 1 r o m

Gommo
ilpJa Pill SOrerll;y,
Mra. R~ Ra''l!llnp, 1'llmRoUt; 8, ~ llf\'0. llolplt
Welbr, lluibel'l'1 An., I'O!no·
ro,y, ..._.,.. ollolrmen at tile

-

Parsons' third problem

5th Beauty Pageant
April 26 in Pomeroy

-

~

Chief

dealt witll &lt;logo running at llu-ge
in the community.
Ordinances covering &amp;he alt..
uaUon were studied and :It was
reported that ownen rA dogJ
can be fined from $1 to $5 for
each offense and each da.Y that a
dog runs looae Is oonsJdered a

By BOB Ir n EFLil.'H
A boom in new hOUsing In
Middleport took on encooraglng
proapocta Monday night.
Mlddl-rt Village Council, ln
a regular session, approved a
plan for dividing Into loti property owned by tile Goegleln Co.
in the Park St. area ot Middleport.
The division plan, submitted
by Councilman Clifford &amp;umbo,
who represents council on t h e
Middleport Planning Commission, divides the Goeg]ein property into 10 lots, the smallest of
which Is 100 by 110 reet.
Originally, the area owned by
the Goegleins was placed ln an
industrial category when t h e
oommunH;y was zoned. However,
two residents later were authorIzed to build homes on two lots
a part of tho 10 making up
the complete subdivisions.
One home has already been
constnlcted and a second is planned. Cooncilmen said that there
is considerable Interest In the
lots by potential new h o m e
builders.
The plarming commission earHer had approved the drawing
fA the layout of the 10 lots as
approved last night by council.
In other hoosingdevelopments,
COWictlman John Zerkle reported that he and Mayor C, 0. Floher conferred recently with Cong,
Clarence MOler ln connection
with a housing development.
Zerkle said that a site r o r
a development appears to be a~
vallable. Morlday night he received printed Material• from
Cmg. Miller ouUin!hr act!oilii tile
vtllop mil¥ take ID begin a hoUsIng development.
The materials will be studied
by council and other village officlalo.
Recommends Pipe Purchase
Harold Chase, maintenance supervisor, met with council and
suggested that 600feetoftwotnch
cast Iron pipe be purchased. This
would be laid and Ued ln wltll
the Grant st. water main.
As the sltuatlon now stand~

Paul Wemer, scoutmaster, and
Jolmston, POmeroy.
Four gallon donors were Eva boys of P&lt;&gt;meroy Elemontacy
Hartley, MlddJeport; E r m a schools.
Clerical work was performSmith, 1\)meroy, and Martin Wilplacement blood.
coxen. Racine, and a five gaJ- ed by Naomi Loodon, Jeanette
First time donors were Ern- lm donor was Guy E. Guinther, Lawerence, Dorothy S m 1 t h,
Carolvn l&gt;rice, Mary N e a 11 e,
est Vlnayanl, OkO¥ Conally,llcln- Pomeroy.
ald Sargent, Charles Rhode s,
Nurses assisting were R u t 11 JeaJ, .• case, Macel Barton.
Dale WlsaJ, Mildred Alkire, Low- Powers, Racbael .!Jierldan and Joyce Hoback, Grace 0 r a k e,
ell M&lt;Nicklo, Rochey Chevalier, Thelma Circle, and docms at~ Elolao Whl..,, Joan So,rro, Juan1111&lt;1 Wilma VIneyard.
tending wore R. D, Heaton, L . D. Ita Sayre, Boulall Strau88, HarGallon donors were Maxine Telle. Charles Mullen, Sellm riet Neigler, MarJorie Crow,
Edltll lisson, Lula Hampton, and
Pb.Uson, Racine; David Zerkle. Blazewle2., and Ray Pickens.
Vernon Nease.
Pomeroy, and Wanda El&gt;lln, Porn~
D\Hiations were by ~it;y
eroy.
Hoek !\)rings Grange will! Mra.
Two ga.U.on donors were Fre- Lottie Leonard, chairman, ser- Print !hlp, WMI'O Radio, T h e
da Edwards, Mlctileport, a n d ved the canteen.
Dally Semmel, Atllens MesoenKenneth Harris, Pomeroy, and
Loodlng and unloading was done ger, Meigs Local School a n d
1 t11ree plloo donor wao Doro- by Boy Scout Troop No. 248,
Landmark.

Commerce IDd XI
No Chapter at the Beta

'·

or•s court.

SALT LAKE CITY (UPO Robert B. Prince, treated at a
local hospital for a finger
wound, told authorities he was
shot by his automOOHe.
Prince said the heat from
his car's cigarette lighter discharged a .22 caliber bullet In
the ashtray.

limit tllo munbor tbla year to
15 - .....ld notlb' either Mra.
Rawllnp,.. Mra. Welker.
Mqa, (lallll, Atllena and Waahllllrllltl iltult be alngle lllld
1ugton Couotlea, thlo papont 'I!UI nover have been morrtod, or hod
bo _ . . . . by tile Pemero,y · a marrlaa8 IIIINIII\ICL.'l'h01 must

'

sent the offender. After that,
if no action is forthcoming, the
offender will be citAod tD ma.r-

Parsons was instruct.

65 Pints of Blood are Received

..

,.r".· l ·

GALLOPING LARYNGITIS!
WHAT A CHANCE TO GIVE
HIM THE

~ter

COLUMBUS (lJPO - 'l' h e
House Finance Committee waa
told today a maJor reorganlzation or the federally - funded
Bureau of VoeaUonal Rehahlli~
taUon would be proposed next
mmth to the state Board of FAueatlon.
charges, stemmlni from a
state School 91pt. Martin w.
ocollle with pollee, wero Wed/l!~aldIlia .-Pn~tatlon
against one student.
' wculd
elude 1 DeW director
. Classn were erxted early but tor the ureau, with current dithe school expected to hold rector
d Moratrty being
classes as usual today.
moved Inio another position. Ea..
Eibling. school bcBrd mem- sex testltied betore the Finance
bers, school officials ancl Mayor Committee which held a hearM. E. Sensenbrenner met for 1ng on the governor's $948.9 miltwo hours Ia"' Monday to dis- !ton budget.
cuss the situation at the school.
The Bureau of Vocational HeWest High Principal David Ran- habllltaUoo in tile preaont bien.
daU ocheduled a &lt;omblood nium has received nearly $20
mooU~V tonight with tile PTA
million from tile focleral gavam the school's regional assess- ernment to operate. The next
moni eonunltleo.
blermlum propoaal caUocl for
Elbllng said tile suspended nearly $SO mllllon,
students must return to school
with tMir parents at the end o1
LOCAL TEMPS
the 10 day&amp; in order to be reThe temperature In Pomeroy's
instated. 'HIJ said they would al- downt01m business dlatrlct at
so have to pledge good behavior 11:20 a.m. today was 37 defOr the rest of the school year. grees muler cloudy skies.

Lle~ARIAN

bed

Colum-

bus School• Supt. Dr. Harold
H. Eibll1'4! said Morda,y night
students
who disrlC)t high
school classes wiU "have to be
excluded from school"
Eibltng's statement followed a
"lie-In" at the West Hlgh School
&amp;)11lD&amp;sium during a hmch
period Monday. Sevent,y..(our
Negro students, who reCUsed to
leave the gymn and return to
class,
were
arrested and
suspeo:led from school for 10
days. All 74 were charged with
trespassing. Assault and battery

EAfV!

. 'PINE

Will Be
Banned

.1 . _ ENIA6ED TO A JfT

Crt'/ 'II1Til
·.c;lltEF

Wida

~

Tickets, trash and •-uruter,"

• - l u g "' lbo Pf
Mal'• Fellowahlp ~
H1a wife will be Jli'O...
will be
11

-·

' ddition{\

Council Approves Ten-Lot Housillb
Goeglein Property in
IOrder Strict Enforcementl ParL St. Area Divided

'Wrrw MY ~&gt;~US!Io\Nt&gt; ANP OLDEST SON ~PE 1
:v.out.D HAVE PANICI&lt;!D IN THAT ~1(.

... WIJ6.

......._,. lnlllo 30o ..,. Low lonigllt I n - . . . . . -

Of The Me~·MtuOn Jtrea

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Mr. Kdh·.

Weather

•'

~ ;I
I~

'

�Fobr-Y 25, 1969
~~- :(G

. ..AJWlFW

PT. PLEASANT - Funeral
_,;co roo- Mro. Oma J. Tll&lt;ker Newell, 61, ot 121% 0 h I o

Slreet, wtu be held W-ocloJ
2 p.m. In the Cbajlman-WUcoxen MortuarywiththeReY. Tommy Thom ulftdatlng. Quial
will be In Kirkland llemorlal
Ga~o. Mrs. NowoU d I e d
&amp;mday . .enlnginPlee-Val-

,I
I

I

ley Hospital after a short Illness.
~~e is survived by her OO•band, Homer; rour daughter&amp;,
three sons, three slater&amp;, tour
brothers and 10 graadchildren.
Friends are being received at
the mortuary .
::O».=::»'§:::::::::::::::::::::=::;::~"':o.OO:::~::::~:o:;:;::.:::::::

Jaycee Qub Se~
Annual Radio Day
PT. PLEASANT - March 15th
is the date set ror the Annual
Radio Da_y spoosored by IJJp, local Jaycee Club aver WJEH Ra-

NEW 1-1 AVEN - Mr. aOO Mrs. Roy K. Crawford of New
Haven, W. Va., are announcing the engagement of their daughter, Gail, to Thomas Earl Layton n, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward F. La.)10n, Route 2, Point Pleasant. A June wedding is
being planntd.
Miss Crawford is a 1965 graduate ofWahama High School
and is presently e~~¥Jloyed by Lakin State Hospital, as a P, B. X.
operator. She is a member of the United Methodist Church in
New Haven.
Mr. Layton is a 1965 graduate of Point Pleasant lligh
Sclleol and is presently employed by the .1\ppalachian Power
CompaiU' as an inspector. He also is a part-time student at
Marshal! University. He is active in the Jaycees Club and is a
member of Lhe United Methodist Church in New Haven.
FRIDAY
WDDLEPORT WCTU Friday,

7:30 p, m., Heath · Methodist
Cllutch; members to bring a
guest.

TU=AY
L,ADIES AUXll.JARY, D

\

I.
~

For G. Wa~~hington
PT. PLEASANT - Fllcy perlORa attended the Georp Wallhlngton blrthdi.Y dlmor

NEAL RELEASED

An o;:der
was filed in the office or the
circuit clerk releasing Charles
0. Neal from probation. Neal
had pleaded guilty to a relony in
Circuit court and was placed
on three years probation by the
court on February 9, 1969,
PT. PLEASANT -

PLEASANT VALLEY Jl(l8PITAL

F .... U, 1969
ADMITI"ID: Ronald McCart,y,
Weat Columbia; Mn. Henr7 Molbert, Pl. Pleuant; Ml"l. Sblart
Burdette, Pl. PleaAOt; A D Da
Dklna, Leon; Mra. Charlea Miek,
Pl Plea&amp;ant; Mrll. VernonRoulh,
Muon; Mrs. Paul D. !Iowen,
l't. Pleasant; Thomao Cleland,

HlUitingtoo.
Blaine Mohr, poatmaster ol

Galllpolls Ferry and president
~ the loeal organization, served as muter of ceremonies.
After dinner tile guests were entertained in the &amp;arlight Room
with a musical program present6d by the Kyger Creek High
School Chorus under the direction ol John Matheny.

1

Trust your

Pl••·

~· ~ _...,.~ - "" ·

... .,__

flaf"Liu.L\olo ~,.... ,

-~re

ill~

Nibert, GalllpoUs Fert7; Mra.
Ricky Colo and 100, Pl. Pleaoan~ Ronald Mccart.Y, «"est Columbia; Mae WWlama, Pnmeroy;
Mn. Paul Glover, Ashton.

3 -

Helps You Overco.iiio

FALSE TEETH

BmTHS: Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Holbert. Ft. Pleasant, twins, ~
eon and a daughter; Mr.andMra.
Charlea Mick, Pt. Pl.ea8111t, a

11011; Mr. and Mra. Delbert Put- Applt! Grove, a 11011.

:.:.
..

TEXACO

PL" IILL':ill~: ~

f'l,,_

ll~ i u, ~57 Ull. !Jus l"" "' &lt;&gt; fll&lt;~
f:dii O&lt; Itll'·'lolle ~ 9 :l.&lt; l H.
S.o·&lt;&gt;n&lt;l oh-. poo ...epoK!oo Pomn&lt;&gt;,~, Ohla.
r."ll"'•l 0&lt;1'~ ' 11 " .-.: , .,._.,. . ....nto li•e 1.._..11,._
~~~ i~ ;olio~""' ' . 1,., .• I ~ ~:. o o 1 \ •t St. . !'ow hr ~

,,..._

.. ·r t• llun r ote &gt;: i leh,·e rod b) &lt;" l "i~ ··
•"" n' .....Ul&gt;&lt;blr n '"""" pe r •ee~ ; .,. }eor i n
..tron&lt;&lt;' 11 ttJo lloo ll) ~ntinel Offlr•, l21. ~n. Sl&gt;
mnnlb• , $l1 .7a. Tl&gt;&lt;.,.• n...,.11h•. ~.il'"o. lb Mo...-.r
-

rorrler oon10&lt;1 001 a&gt;11UobJ.,, Or-..

munlh $UI ~ II!&lt;' ""'il ; n,. )'Mr II:!. \HI ~!&gt;
....,..b• 46. ~"- Three montJ,o ~~-Oil . S.tooo·t _,lkol
J&gt;r i&lt;r im;ludco -;.,nda.J Time-ot l""l.

.

675-24&amp;0

992·511&amp;
IIDDLE~ORT,

PT.

0.

.
.
.
.
.
.
.
trS WHITE HAT

-----0~-J!-~R~----::-------------

PLEA~

I. VA.

I"""

High.

ANNUAL INSPECTION, Pomeroy Chapter 60, Royal Arch Masons, 7:30p.m. Tues.dQ, Mason·
ic Temple; dinner at 6:30 preeeding for companions and la-

dles.
LADIES AUXIUARY, Feeney-

Bemett Post 128, American Legion, 7:30p.m. at the hall, Thesdali meeting or jwd.or auxiliary
member• at 7 p.m.
SOUTHEflN BAND Boosters,
7:30 tonight at higll school, Racine; final plans ror band banquoL
WEDNFIDAY

WOMEN'S Christian Temperance Union, 2 p.m.
Wedlloodl&gt;,
Pomeroy United
Methodist Church; amual Frances Willard tea. Eaeh member
to bring a guest. Mrs. T. T.
atelton will give the program.
FEENEY·BENNETT Post 128,
American Legion, 7,30 Wedllosday night at tho hall.
POMEROY

WILDWOOD GARDEN C l u b,
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.atthehome

Homer Holter, Mrs.Da.y.

~-.......

SPECIAL 71M£AGAIN
Ar7HE ZJOD8EBUI'B

The Southern Valley Athletic
Conference baskelball coaches
Monday night at Oscar's select·
od 1i1e 1968 - 69 AII-SVACdream

Kyger Creek; Millard CaSsidy,
Mol. carter aoo Rudy Shively ard
Bruce Gabriel, North GaUla;
Steve SWes and IJoyd Myers,
team. ·
Southwestern; Jim Adams, HilAn all-senior lineup compos- ton Wolfe and Ron Harper,Southecf or two repeaters from last ern and Dale Rothgeb.
year was chosen.
Durillt the regular SV AC campaign. the first D.ve all stars
SCOI'ed a total of 960 points.
The team is made LW of 6-1
Dave Daniels, Halll'llD Trace; &amp;..
0 Keith carter • SoUtbwestern;
6-2 Ron Greenlee, North Gallia;
6-3 Chuck Bradbury, Kyger Creek
and 5-9 Ray Karr, Eastern.
Daniels Jnd Bradbury are re- By United Press International
peaters trom the 1967-68 squad.
East
W L Pc~ GB
The secoDII team ronslsts or
Jimmy Dale Walker, Sout.hwest- Miami •••.. 32 25 •561
ern; Dennis Eichinger, Eastern; Minneaota •.• 31 27 .534 11h
Stew ~auldtng and Tom Reese, Kenlucky •••• 28 '1:1 .509 3
Kyger Creek; and John Garnes. Indiana. •.•• 31 32 .492 4
North Gallla. All but Eichinger New York ••. 16 40 .286 15lh
are seniOI"I.
West
ln other matters the SV AC
W L PeL GB
coaches agreed to cooduct a cage Oakland .. .. • 45 12 •789
preview Nov. 22, at Kyger Creek Denver ..••• 34 24 .586 111h
High School, with all conference New Orleans .• 30 29 .508 16
teamo participating.
Dallas ••••. •'1:1 29 .4S2 11'h
Alao reviewed were the 1969 Los Angeles •. 24 33 • 421 21
baseblll ~ football schedules. Houston .•..• 18 38 .321 26'h
Baaeball achedules wW be esMonday's Reaults
tablished on 1 day-to-day blsts, Dallas 128 OaklaOO 117
11 w•ther permits.
Miami 128 Houston 114
(Only games scheduled)
Atterding last night's meet..
iqr were Dan Wright and John
Tuesday"s Gamea
Riebel, Eastern; Paul Dillon and Oakland at Ne" York
Noel Heister, Hannan Traeej ec&gt;o New Orleans at Denver
mer Bradbury, John Wickline, Miami at Indiana
(Only games scheduled)
Howard Miller, and Jdtn sarw,

To George Washington
Mrs. Rose who noted that at
the time ol his inauguration the
nation was in debt $80,000,000,
including foreign, domestic and
state obligations.
Mandie Rose read a poem,
"House by the Side or the Road,"
and played, "Beautiful Ohio,"
on the organ, and Heidi :Milhoan presented "Psalm or LHe."
Following their trip, the girls,
Mrs. Rose and Mrs. Dwight Milhoan, senior president or the
C.A.R,, returned to the Rose
home where refreshments carrying out the Waslllngtoo birthday theme were served.

&amp;rn&amp;

SCORES

SHIRT
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9 - Out At 5

Robinson's Clu1ers
216 E. 2nd, P~r
90 Mill 51, Mlddl•"llff

SEE OUR DISPLAY
OF PREFINISHED

College Ratings

By United Preas International
Elot
WLPcLGB
Baltimore ••• 49 17 , 742
Phlladelotda •. 44 21 .677 4'h
New York •• . 4:4 24 .647 6
.&amp;00 9'h
CinciDI'IIti •• , 34 32 .515 15
Detroit .•••• 26 42 . 382 24
MUwaukee •.• 21 45 .318 28
West
W L Pet. GB
Los Angeles .. 43 24 .642
Alla!U . •••• 42 27 .609 2
San Fro~ •••• 32 36 .471 ll 1h
San Diego .••• 28 38 . 424 14'h
Chicago •••.• 27 40 .403 16
Seattle ••••.. 25 43 .368 ll!lh
Phoenix •.... 14 53 . 209 29
Monday's Results
Baltimore 123 Detroit 119
Chicago 119 San Fran. 108
(Only games scheduled)
Tuesday' 1 Games
san Diego at Milwaukee
Phoenix vs. Boston at NY
Atlanta at New York
Seattle at Los Angeles
Philadelphia at Cincirmatl
Chicago at San Francisco
(Only games scheduled)

Boston. •••• 29 26

B_y United Preu Intenw.tload
TOM. 87 l.oou. St. 63
Kentueky 108 Aloboma 711
ClemsOn 92 Virginia 90
lofich. 83 Minn. 711
VUlanova 79 xavier (0.) 75
Kins:a PL 92 Brooklyn Coil 72
Bowling Grn. 103 Loyola OIL)

Si-"

led 81
Q-no CdL IS Adol.(lhi 91 (ot)
Kanoaa 83 Oklahoma 58
Washburn 70 E. N. Mex. 60

Waolt.._..S&amp;. MCILM

Wuhlnii&lt;IO II M~l ENTRY
NEW

YORK

U
\

(11P!)..IIIcl'\

Ohio u. 87 N. m 86
QUIIUyi,.-" Will .......101\Y ..
PllUI TextUe S3 AkronM
pare tho fteldi lor tile a.lo fll
Auburn 87 Georgia Tech 85
tJ.e 1169 IC4JI trldl
Gustawll 73 MacAlester 62
chun!&gt;ionohlj&gt;a hore Mlrell I. II.
St. John's (Minn.} 88 Duluth 57
l&lt;llal of 1,281 · - '""' 12
Montana st. 87 Gonzaga 66
eolleaea hive beea 111tenc1.

73
Nebraska 79 Colorado 6S
Vir. Tech 79 Tulane 76
Lehigh 77 Rider 68
St. Bona. 97 Seloo Hall 79
Missouri 66 Kan. St. 62
Slpry Rock 78 St. Vincent 54
Grove City 98 Edtmoro 86
earn. Mel. 93 Wayneaburg 77
Cal. (Pa.) 90 Loc:k Haven 74
W. Fla. 88 st. Leos 69
Fairfield 94 Brdgprt 88
Dalto 121 Wilmifwton 92
Bowdoin T.1 MIT 64
Georgia 95 Miss. St. 80
R~CHEDULE TWIN IDLL
NEW YORK (UP0 - A Feb•
10 snowed - out National Basket...
ball Association doubleheader at
Philadelphia today was rescheduled for Monday, ~rch 24, the
day after the regular season was
officially scheduled to eoi
San Diego plays Boston in the
opener of the twirQill ard Cinchmati faces host Philadelphia
in the nightcap.

$

THE
DOWNING-CHILDS
AGENCY

INSURANCE
REAL ESTATE-MUTUAL FUNDS

I
!

OVER 100 YEARS OF SERVICE
992-2342
220 N. 2nd AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIC

00
• •

i

i

'

up to

'

l'

1r1n

l
I

i

'.
H
l .

- - - - -- - - -1-,lri..... RO-----==--==--~

.

'~--------------~·~~ [;] [;]
.....,,
Col......,.'"" lk&gt;vl!l.m Ototo
c""-"· '"" ,,....

n~oo

1, IO..IIM to

r•c~r~~ ~

Alttll JO.

I

~-

SWITCH to a modern flameless electric range

SIGN your coupon and fill in the required in·

if you are presently using an old fashioned

formation. Your wiring allowance is redeem·

flame -type stove. When you do, you earn up to
a 25·dollar ($2!.&gt; .'&gt;0) range wiring allowance.

able through April 30, l 969.

LOOK for a range wiring allowance coupon
with your electric service statement. Take it
to yol!r cl~ : tric appliance dealer today.

'

• ·, •

CHOOSE a flameless electric range with a
self·cleaning oven. Set the cleaning controls
and the oven will clean itself ... automatically
... electrically .. . for less than ten cents and
no effort from you .

COLUMBUS AND SOUTHERN OHIO ELECTRIC COMPANY

..,

,.
•,
.'

I

I
1' •

-~

rt$IOnt

WOOD PANELING

..

':l

'

' ·····

.,

. loll AJibwOrtll will bo the uslst.. lag holtess.
POMEROY -MIDDLEPORT U-

TIRE

aa Club, regular meeting, PomJl'OY United Me-st Church,
N-oclo1 at .-..

Plus Tax
2.20

775x14
775x15
825x14 '25·40

LEND-A.-HAND Circle of Har·
risonvl.lle, 8 p.m. Wednesday at
the home or Mrs. Robert AI·
klro.
THURSDAY

SPECIAL MEETING, Southern

Board of Education, 7:30 p.m.
'I'hur~, at high school.
SHRINE CLUB dance sesslon,
7:30 p.m. 'Illursday, ln Masonic Temple basement, MiddleporL
REVIVAL AT Plants Memorial Church beginni~ 7:30 p.m.
'11luradly, Rev. Roscoe Thorne,
e~list; Rev. Edward Grirfldt, pastor, invites public.
XI GAMMA MU Chlpter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 8 p. m.,
ThursdQ', social room or C &amp;

up.

Plus Tax
1.99

'

WOMEN'S Assoclatioo, First
United Presbyterian Church,
lburadl¥ 7:30 ·p.m.; Mrs. Paul

Plus

'

' ''

Tal
2.36

ftenty Of Free Parking

R. H. Rawlings Sons Co., Mill &amp; Second Stre•t,s,,:.M
iddl:e.port,
.

HJptoulall, devotional leader,

'

Mr1. E&lt;twaro Burkett, Miss Phyl-

lis Joachim, Mrs. Helen White,
}~ON.:lND.AV&amp; .

·o.

,

•
.MJDDLEPORT, OHIO

t'

·'

•!

:.- ·,·

gottogom

.

.... .. .

j

,."

.l '

With Trade-In Tire OH Yoll' C•

SOE.

Mr1. Ela)ll Ball, and Mrs. Warreo Darla, hostesses.

cats,
pla,ylll!:
at Athena,
squeezed by Northern Dlinols
87-86.
John Canine tossed in30pointl
for the Cats, but the Ohioans
needed roor free throws in the
final 43 seconds to gain thelr
15th win in 23 starts.
In other games: Central State
downed Defiance 75-47 at Wilberrorce, Bowling Green scored
a 103-73 home win over Loyola

Butler at Toledo, John C&amp;rroll
vier ol Ohio 79-75 at Philadel- at Allegheny (PL) and Steubenphia, Thmlaa More mashed Ce- vOle at f'AMOD (PL)
Ce!Kral State, elgtlth-rl.nked
darYIIle 101-75 at CovingUia,
amaU
college team, roiled to
Ky., and Philadelphia scored a
an
ei.IQ'
win. The Man.uden
65-S4 home win over Akron.
Ohio State faced Northwest-- (1&amp;..1) were paced by RobOrt
ern !Gnlgll~ hoping to better Ito Moore with 16 _potntL Dan TerBig Ten reeord. The Buckeyes hooe aDII Dl.w Baker each had
need the win to keep alive any 11 poinls lor Defiance (13-11)
Ninth - ranked VillanoYa held
ho!)e of a allce or the conferonto
a 8CQietlmea tenH lead in
ence c~lonahlp. In other
games, Cincinnati is at -Drake, bl.llliqj: Xavier its lOth loss in
26 games. Tom RohUrw: was
high ror the Musketeers with
25 points. Villanova is now 20-4.
O.n McLemore scored 24
points to lead BowliqJ Green to
led by All-America Lew Alcin- an easy win over l..c!IYoiL The
dor, is shooti.• ror an Fllc:ono led 47-37 at the half
u111recedentef;l third consecutive and broke the game q)en in the
NCAA basketball tltle and ita last halt.
rourth in the last Ove years
under Coach JohnnY Wooden.
The Bruins, by winning the
PaciOc Eight, are ooe of seven
con!erence champions who draw
NEW YORK (UPO The
rirl!it-rouOO byes into the regton- United Press lnternaUOial maals. Others are from the jor college basketball ratings
Adantic Coast, Southeastern, with nrst place votes and wonBig Ten, Missouri Valley, Big lost records in parentheses
Eight aoo West C~».st eonreren- (12th week):
ces.
I. UCLA (22-0)
350
2. North carolina (21-2l
280
3. Sanla Clar (22-1)
245
4. LISalle (22-1)
208
5. Davidoon(22-2l
194
6. Kelt.ucky (19-3)
187
7, Purdue (16-4)
125
8. S~ Johns (NY) (2th"l)
122
9. VWonova (19-4)
40
10. Duquesne (17-3)
31
11. Lwlsville (17-3)
31
12. South Caroli .. (19-3)
28
13.
New
Mexico
St.
(21~)
21
NEW YORK (UPO- Tho National InvUaUonal Tournament 14. Kanoao (19-4)
13
11
(NIT), hoping tho ideo of not IS. Ohio State (15-5)
10
having to play machint;Hike 16. Wyoming (16-8)
17. Drake (1~4)
8
UCLA and Lew AlciOOor would
18.
(tiel
attract some or the better
6
lndepeOOent coll'l!lge basketball Boston Coli. (18-3)
6
teams. began doling out Invita- New Mexico (16-8)
tions today to its allllal post- 20 (Tiel
Tulsa (18-S)
S
season classic.
5
UCLA ant Alclndor, losers or Winois (16-4)
only one game in three years,
ore ticketed for tho Natlorel coach Bob Cous_y retiring at the
Collegiate Athletic Aasoclation eDII or the season, was reported
(NCAA) tourney as champlono leanl~ toward the MT.
o! the Pacific Eight Conference.
With the nation's 15 major
The NIT's 16 berths were conrerence champions automaavaUable to indot&gt;Ondent teams tic erW:rants in the NCAA •'lnt.
looldog fi;K the ''euy Wa,)l out, 00 the NIT, no doubt, will sptce Ita
those not invited to tJ.e NCA
tteld with the runners-up in the
event., and various conference Atlantic C~st, Missouri Valley,
rwtners-\.Wo
Southeastern, Big Eight and
Tho NIT h - to nob eigllth- Western Athletic Conferences.
ranked St. John's, the top rated Either
second-ranked
North
independent. with a 20-3 record. Corolino (2!-2) or 121h-ranked
However, the Redmen were South Caroline (19-3) Dgured as
practically assured an NCAA the ACC runner--up. llowever,
bid ard fliuJ"ed to grab It In that team won't be decided until
h~s ol meetirw UCLA in Ute
the completion of the annual
finals and avenging a loss to the ACC post-season tourney March
Bruins in the title game oC the 8.
Holiday Festival Tournament
Dayton (18-6), tho defending
twoi'DOIKhaago..
NIT champioo, could be back to
It St. John's rollowed rorm, it deferKI its crown along with.
would leave ninth-ranked Villa...,. Marquette (1~4), Notre Dame
ova (20-4, including a win over (18-5), New Mexico state (21-3),
the Redmenl as u.e losfcal Colorado
state
(15-4) and
choice to snap 1tJ the NIT"s Seattle (18-6).
nrst bid for the tourney which
begins March 13 and ends with
the championship game on the
afternoon of March 22 at
Madison Square Garden.
Tenlh ronked Duquesne (17-3)
and 18tfa,.nnked Bolton College
(18-3) also figured high on tJ.e
NIT's guest Hat am BC, with
of Chlcqo. VUlanova edpd X..

College Scores

NIT Play
To Start
All-SVAC Dream March 13
Team Announced

r ew

The George Washington monument at Long Bottom was visited by members of the Cradle
of Liberiy Cflapter of the Children of the American Revolution following a meeting on Washington's Birthday at the home of
Mrs. John Rose. ·
The Daughters of the American Revolution erected the bronze
marker at the Long Bottom site
a number of years ago, It is
located at the spot where George
Washlngton camped on Oct. 28,
1770 while here exploring and
5urveying the Otlio coontry. It
Is reported that Washington's
impressions of the fertile land
or the Ohio valley eventually led
to the settlement of several Revolutionary War .soldiers here.
The meeting of the group opened with the pledge to the Oag
and a piano solo "America the
BMuUful"' by Mandie Rose. Ju.
lie Rose read .. Washington at
the Helm," the story or Washington's inauguration at Feder•.1 Hall at Wall St., N, Y, on
April 30, 1789.
Comments from a biography
on Washington were given by

~

or

Y ~ 'l-2 1 3 ~ .

( II), ~e •

made the difference as the

East- Hall' Cross, New York
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPOEighth-ranked St. John's
New University and Rutgers.
Mideast- Dayton, Marquette
Y «k "as expected today to
aoo
Notre Dame.
accept the first or 10 at-large
MidwestHouston, Oklahoma
Invitations to compete in the
City,
Colorado
state, Lamar
31st annual National Collegiate
Athletic Association (NCAA) Tech, Trinity of Texas and West
Texas State.
basketball championships.
West- New
Mexico state,
Fltteen conrerence champions
Seattle
and
Long
Beach State.
autanatlcally qua!Uy.
Under
a
run,
25-team
bracket,
The Redmen (20-3) are one ot
several independent powers nine first-round games are
betrw; considered for the three scheduled at five dHferent sites
at-large berths in the Eastern March 8 with the winners
bracket. Other leading conten- advancing to dle rour regional&amp;
ders in the East were ninth- -East, Mideast, Midwest and
ranked Villanova (1~4), lCttb- West- March 13 and .\ 5.
The finals are scheduled ror
ranked Duquesne (17-3) ard !8March 20 and 22 at the
th-rated Boston College (13-3).
Other independent teams be- University or Louisville.
Defending champion UCLA,
lieved under consideratioo were:

''""''•hed
&lt;IIU; e&gt;&lt;-ep&lt; ;.atu~ ~&gt; Thelllolo
l'ulll" l"ng l&lt;W"I'I'•"&gt;• 11 0 !.luhanlcSL,

p,.,.,•r&lt;J),

Press lntern1tional

NCAA Tourney Begins March 8

c ....... r.,....,.,lll, ~-.;w.-

~•ll •y

McKee Sets New Record~
Bobcats Nip Foe 87-86
Gerald McKee set an all-time
Ohio University scoring record
Mondly Right, but it wa1n't exactly hla moment of glory.
McKee played but 85 seconds
am scored two points because
or a broken thumb sutrered last
Saturday. He now has 1,253
points, surpassing the previous
mark of 1,252 oet by Doo Hilt
rrcrn 1962-65.
The two points, howeVer,

EIIIJ

MUo.-~AH:A

Tt1e Dally Sentinel, PCMnll"O)'-Middleport, 0 .• Tueodl&gt;, February 26, 1969

By United

CITY ICE AND FUEL CO.

ut:von:u Ttl JNT E:R£.!.7 ot·

H.JCIIAMII ., OWE:t.,

•
HJ.DIIo
1

heat to

THE DAILY SENTINEL

Rnut• •too•~

ASK TO WED
POINT PLE..-\SANT - Melvin
Ra_y Johnson, 21, Pt.. Pleasant.
and Roberta Jo Randolph. 17,
Pl. Pleasant, have made an application for a marriage license
in the offi cc of the county clerk.

5a1m"da1

night It the Pleasant I'Oint II&amp;~ hald by the lolaiiGil c.wd;y
Pos&amp;master Aasod.ation.
~cial guests were 4th Dl,..
trlct Cong. Ken Hechler, George
E. Wrloh~ Pootal Service Ollicer; R. P. Grogan, Postal Serviee Office or Charleston, a n d
E. G. Bye, Pootal .,opector of

J

o.,orge Eliot was the pseU•
1't. 1'1•-: Mn. Lincoln Buoh
donym
of Mary Ann Evans.
and 11011, GalUpolloFerr:Y; AJIIIO!a

Youth Visit Monument

Webster Post 39, American Le·
gion, 7:30 TUesday night at the
hall; Joe Struble to speak oo
Americanism.
A silent auction will be held
and each one is asked t.o bring
an
for it.
l$JGS COUNTY Rldlitl!' Cilb,
lit home or Mr. and Mrs. Rob·
ert Philip Meier, Middleport,
Tuesday, 8 p.m.
SOUTHERN ATHLETIC Boostera special meeting, Tuesday,
7:3:0 p.m. at Southern L o c a l

~Mrs.-

dio station.
iodd Mayes, chairman rorthis
year'e arrangement, announced
that various community leaders
will participate and discuss civic developments along with sev·
eral other special reatures to be
announced later. Othermembers
o( the committee are Sam Nea1,
James H. CaU and Harlan PitchCord.

[HQSPITAL NEWS

lloclno; ...... Delbert""-· I+
pie Grot"e; M,a. Clifford H a r t,
Leon: Earl Conrad, n.
ant; Tva Lanier, Pt. Plui'Wlf.;
Jameo Rolllno, Apple Grove.
DI&amp;:HARGEV: Mro. Robert
Fhher, Pl Pleasant; Mra. Earl
atvwu1 lDd 1!101111 Letart; M r I.
Robert Dunlap, Pt. Pleasant; curford lblter, Racl.ne; MrL Wade
Ralldol.(lh and dauibter, 1'1. Pleuant; ...... Monford Hultat, Mlcldloport; Mro. Wiley Mlntoo, Ft.
Pleuant; Mr1. Carroll Casto,

'J

.. •
!
•

•

j:

i

�BY JACK O'BRIAN
, NEW YORK -

Bins

Crooby

a mlllion -~·· Then tbere are the
eepr gnomes whose work brings

es. articles and prose and 1f
you see him autographing copies
- call the Fm beCause he's still
m the wanted-list .•.• J. He:'.l~'•
" Catch 22,. mystified a lot ot: Intelligent adults when it emerg-

NIUsed to 10 - tho homolex- ~.ooo or less a film ..•• T h e
1111 c:GIIIOdy '"!!le Boy I ID the Ona11ises have had threats from
Bulr'' but women are of stem- the new Greek gov't'a leftlst en.,. 111u11 - wile KolhY ond oo- emies and are being guarded a·
ed in '61 but now It's on the
clallte Ame Slater llrnouolned rcund the clock •.•• Don Ros-s
eighth
grade reading list at CoGil to the swisb4dt after hmch isn't endrel.v desperate because
lumbls
Grammar School and is
at •'21" .. .• One ot the minor but his ''Sloot An,ything With Halr''
taught
in
high schools all over
Important scandals erupting from play did a fast toldo: it was sold
_••• Goldie Hawkins' Goldie's New
the blizzard milhandling - snow to the movies for a hetty hunk
York gets jumpin' a lot earlier
vehicles dicil"t get anti - freeze .... Don' s. wife Patti Deutsch is
these
nights so Goldle'sgreatold
•.•• After all these decades, film one ol the witty kid&amp; in the Upshow-tune
concerts now start a.t
star-TV procklcer Gail Patrick stairs at the Downstairs satireeight p.m.
and husband COrnelius Jackson heaven.
No. 1 Soul Singer James
Random
House
will
publish
Eldropped each other's q~tiona •.•.
Brown
"went public" With a new
Leslie Uggams showed up at dridge Cleaver's random speech-

firm ealled ' 'Gold Platter" IOoperate and francht.e a cha1D f1
reatauranll ..... Gov. Maddox
might be lnterellted ID "'--ng
tile young black otar Ia bolns
backed b)' a KI'OUP ol whiUI Georgia busineiiiD'left .... George Carlin (you'Ye aeon him being very
!limy all over the TV clwlnelo)
nwy start a trend- ~MY I there
won't be so much as me "blue"

line in hls material at t h e
Americana's Royal Box when he

from u. o. files; ~ tho
1911 hoes &amp; bug&amp;y do,oo N, Y.

~t K;.ii6ii Gft'fGO a ~Gf

a malt, sundae,
Cone or shake-

aiding .... Now eomes the amblvalenc:e: Terryts too nice to
want Jane to bult a pm a n d
leave tho job 10 her - but lbo'o
not unanl1! ol tile po011b1Ucy.
Jilnm¥ has tile anower 10 1 otar ioolns his priGreat White Hope" in a 1fllkon vacy: ttPrfvaey is for~ aerole p)us understudying the fe- c:ountanta. ,.,. need lt. Adora
male lead, very talented J u n c don't. 'The minute the p.~blic
Alexand&gt;Jr •• .• Terry D pttlng granta a starprlvaey, helsn'tone
her main chance wben Miss AI- any more."

For

street tratnc lllO\Ied at an aver- ..-c1 ol ll'h mllea an hour
••.. Last year N. Y. traflte averaaod 8 miles .. hour (prosreas'l).
Terrence O'Connof'l's ftrst N.
Y. stage a,ppearance 11 in ''The

Speaker is
At Chester

Drive lflls way

For goodness sake!

•••

Recogniticn of paal preaideata
an:l a talk by Mr. AYI.n Romine,

dlatrtct P.T.A. otncer,htehll«hted the aiW.Ial founder'• Day program of the Chelter P. T. A. Monday nfMhL

Drive In and cool it! Open !() Ill 11 Mon. Thnt
Thurs. 10 n1 12-Frl. and Sat. with refreshments
at their belli. Plenty or parking. Try our takehome packs for do-it-yourself treats.

opens here Mar. 4 .... Anthon7
Qubm has a new Capitol album
"I Lave You M,y OWn Way'"
(Anthony ~innl!l? New album
II!'/).
Sidney Howard's "The Late
Christopher Bean" will be revived next montb at 111 E. 59th
51. - th:at's the Ughthouse Little Theatre and all the actors
are blind .... Have a statistic

Mra. Robert Woods hUoduced
Mr. Romine, of Athens, who &amp;poke
on the orpnizatlon otthe P.T.A
in W88hin.gton D. C. In 1897. He
described the P. T. A. as the larg·
eat volunteer organl.r.atlon in
the United States.
Mra. Mary Rose, presldent,

Try Our Dellclou1 S•ndwlchn

ALLEY

P. T.A. prayer and pledge. It
waa decided to purchase a tape
recorder and record p'll1er for
the school. A report of the re-

oald, always defending her beast-

ce-. meetlnc of the Melia CCJun.
ty CGuncll or Parents and Teachers wa1 Jlven by Mra. Kathryn

Ie.

AlWll,)'&amp; beaudtul ex - Zlegfeld
doll Jrene Hayes is over her lateot ~ration W~PendW and diDed at Louise's E. 58th St. spot
•.••
Top script prices in H'wood
1
are $250,000 except for the few
hotshots who rate a percentage
and their takUorno often lops

Wlndan. Four attended from tile
Cheater unit.,
A nomlnoUIW committee ID
pl'tlaanc a alate o1 omcers ror
tho 1989-70 year - - dur-

IIW tho ,•HIIIIi ConJIIto of Mrs.
Norman Mccain, chairman. Mrs.
Woodo and Mro. Brj'OIIL
G, V, R~Wt condueled tho room
count with tho fourth rncle havlrw the largest attenrJance and

Demands

bellv awarded a book. The hoo-

Use of

pttallt;y committee for March are
Mrs. Emerson Pooler, Mrs. Virgil Windon, Mrs. WUI!am Pooler, Sr., Mr~ James Heaton, Mrs.
Harry Brown, M r s. Herbert
Wolfe, and Mrs. Max Cale.

Fluorine
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio's
General Assembly has been
asked to make Ouoridation of

water slt)plies mandatory
the Buckeye State.

Contribution

ln

Made

Six senators introduced leglslatioo M.orxlay night calllng for

comrolled Ouoridation by Jan.

J"t,

ply am waterworks systems
serving 20,000 or more persons.
T~ same legislation would
require by Jan. 1, 1972 all water supplies serving more than
5,000 persons but less tlan 20,~
000 also be Ouoridated.

MVeral
YOUDI men ill the aervtce who
..-re Hnt Chrllllmaobeaesbythe

Conunittee for

club. Thank you notes were also

Floorldotion.

legality of the move.

Introduced in 1951
Controlled Ouoridation of wa--

ter was introduced in Ohio in
1951 at Youngstown. Silke then,
the ccm:mlttee estimated 42 per
cent of Ohio's residents now
drink nuortdated water.

R-&lt;levellnd; Tennyson Guyer,

two resoJ-.ations involving the
federal income tax were of-

Two House bills were approved, One would si~q~ll(y 111mlnl.sttative procedures fOI' aid
to disabled persons and the otJJ..
er would remove obsolete languqe in the state code bnolving
r:;ers' claims and ~ns'
ln.
A 8eMte biD permitting the
issuance ot unvoted ge~nl ob-liptlm - · by tile cooncy

eummtssioners to flnanee c~
atruction or iJI:Ilrovement ot

pnenJ holpital Cacilities "'Ill
IIIJProved 211-3.
A total of six billa were introduced in the House Monday
niar:ht. . Three resolutions were
odCipled,
Se..te action saw, in addition
to the one bill passed, introduction of nine biDs.

TodaY, .the

011

SeJWte was to

vote

a reaolutlon placl,.-

the

question ot lcwertna Ohio's votIIW liP from 21 10 19 yearo old
on the November beDOL
'Ibe Houae wat to vote on a
bill wlllcll ....w1 put otate law

It's not your accident...
but roo are involved

9x Mella CGunl;y tead!Orl
tho poet proaldenta
ol Alpha Omloroo Chapter ol
DoUa Kojlpl GommaiMNIOreddurlns a preoldential luncl-. Saturday al the McArthur El-tary Stbaol.
In tile honored ......, were
Mrl. c. o. Chapmall ol Rutlond,
llrot pr.,.ldent of tho Chapter;
Mr1. Ruth Euler ond Mro, Nan

wore am0111

it happens so often it's easy to shrug it oft as jusl another
accident. But you can't shrug off the fact that you are involved. You-and hundreds of other car owners-will help
pay for the loss.
Accidents are what your auto insurance premiums pay for.
And if you're concerned about the cost of auto insurance
you can't ignore lhe fact thai accidents on Ohio's streets
and highways are increasing . __increasing faster than the
number of drivers among whom those costs must be spread.
Everyone's share of lhe tolalloss gels bigger.

Reportable traffic accidents in Ohio increased by 41% b&amp;lween 1962 and 1967-the last year for which complete
figures are available. In 1967 alone, in this state, they
caused 2.533 deaths, 118,060 known injuries, and more
than $165,000,000 in property damage. The accident trend
is still up.
When accidents happen, auto insurance protects the victim
against serious economic loss. Nothing more. It can't prevent an accident, mend a broken bone, or fix a fender. It

only helps pay the bills-with the premium dollars provided
by thousands of other motorists.

drive. Our police are dedicated to traffic law enforcement,
and they need your support.

These bills-the cost of auto repairs and medical attention
-are getting more numerous. And they're getting higher.
Much higher. And this is what your premium dollars are
used for: to repair damaged cars and repair damaged
people.

Keep it in mind: whenever and wherever an accident happens, you are involved. It shows up In the amount of your
insurance premium.

These are reasons why the cost of auto Insurance has been
going up. And let's be frank: the cost of auto insurance will
continue to go up as long as present accident trends continue, and as long as the cost of auto repairs and medical
services continue to rise.
What can you do about it? Well, there isn't much you can
do personally about inftatlon. But there is something you
can do about accidents. Safer cars and better highways can
help, but what we really need is better and safer drivers. Be
one ... but don't let It goal that. Perhaps the most Important
thing you can do is lo insist on strict and aggressive enforcement of the laws that regulate driving and the right to

-•

OHIO'S BOX SCORE
1982
Tra!fic deaths

1,851

1117
2,533

-

•

up 37%

Catholic Women's Club

tD

Nel-

sonville Sunday.

once lrta are eatabllahed they
beeome the bec:id&gt;one of home

Mrs. Hayes

meeti!W will be lieldet lbo-

ano.

of Mrs. U..rles Mauar. a..
rrcshment8 were l4ti'Yed bJ' .. ..
hoste"' li 10 20 membera.

arcunll rock gardena, pools and

OOII'er beds..
Rail call waa answered by eiY.
lng a valentine verse duri._ the

meetliW prellded over by Mro.
Frank GoebeL Tlie memboro dla-

II
'''I

Program is on

,~ •. 4

Horticulture
NEW HAVDi - The New Haven Garden Club meeting althe
lwlme ol Mra. Fred Bet..,. wllh
Mra. Howard l:larril u co-boat.
e1a, was opened br tbe vlee [D'ealdont, Mro. Howard -rl•
who a110 led devotklno.
The roll eaii was anawered
with .,Name a Famous Per1011
Who10 Birthday Ia tho ....,. as

-·

I'

'TUME-UP

Mro. Velma Rou ..., lolro. Cl,yde
Fol.,., Mro. 11arr&gt; ~. Mrs.
J.
McGrew, Mra. w.
Mro. N. 0. Wain, Mra. L e o
Gibbs, Mrs. Doaald F. R o u a h,
Mrs. L. c. Rouoh, Mro. Harold
Joillom, Mrs, 11-.y Plokms. and

V.

Refreahmenta were aerved to
Mrs. Martin Ohlinger. M r a.
Ra,y Proffitt, Mrs. ottle Roush,

• SHOCK$

T.-.

• BRAKES
• SEAT COVERS
FLOOR MATS

• BATTERIES
• TIRES

the hostesses.

SPRING~
ANGEL TREADS
ARE HEREI
THE SHOE BOX
WHERE SHOES ARE

SEMSI BLE PRICED
Middleport, 0.

Is Honored
Mrs.

Tn.~n1an

Runell and Mrs.

Pat Neutzllns entertained Friday
nlllbt with a ~oJoette oll&lt;lwer holloring Mra. Bessie Hayes at the
home of Mra. Harry Wat1011,
Wetzpll St., POmeroy.
Glfta - practleally all two of
a kind - were placed around a
large stork holding twtna. The
refreshment table was eeatered
with a cake decorated with large
blue ond pink booties, one marked I 'boy" the other Uldrl" and
Inscribed uweleome L 1 t t I e
Ones." 1be eake wauerved with

-·h.

Gameo .,..•• played wltll Mr1.
Renzo Menchini, Mrs. D a v 1 d

Ashley, Mra. Jamea Hall, Mra.
PaUl Morarlt;y, Mrs. Denver ({apple, Mra. Ellen Couch, Mra.
~

Cui-

87,337

118,060

up 35%

149,220

209,712

up 41%

$110,000,000

vou."-

lob 18:4.

$166,000,000

up 50%

Ohio Department of Highway Salety. 1988 fiG urn are not Complete at thll

~poet

Tho .on!J

colleaaue•Misll Anne Maude Fehrman of
Jaekooo, proal-. -&lt;led tho

-

''Just between
. Is ...''
us g1r

preoldont.

--.,.tall.

lllao••·

pall [WO~

allondlqJ the ..._lllcn p r olfOIII,... Ellllbatl! lAntz IJIM&lt;;,

"

to--·
. . [II'-

In ret.tlonablp
Valuel In relatl10111hlp to lho PUPil•
by Judy MaihonOI'
ol. McArth.J.r; and Ml'l. Lantz
apoke on values In relaUORIIdp to

trice Rinehart, Min Rooalle
Slory, Mra. VDma PlkkoJa, ond
Mro. Dorothy Woodard.

able to . - . - "'·

Property
damage

111 kll&lt;l1Difdge 11 tDIIh

Vale, Salem Ctnteri Mr1. Gen.,.. Joadtlm, Pomerqy, udMrs.
Harold Souer, lolltldloport RD,

Mra~

time. Property damaoe Includes an estimate or unreported Meklenta.

Reported
accidents

"For truly mu ooordo ·are
not falu; one who Ia perfe&lt;l

Nellie

Moore, Mldclleport;

Source:

Injuries

Menchini, Mrs. Joame R u a-

sell, Mra. Lena Eberabaeh, Mrs.
Richard Well.
Al110, MJu &amp;Isle Tracy, Miss
Barbara Smltll, Mrs. J a m e 1
Clatworth1, Mrs. Kenneth liarria, Mrs. Gilbert Mee1, Mrs.
Robert Neutzllns, Sr., Mra. Dm
MIDor, Mro. RuooeULowla, Mro.
Lalo Hawl.,., Mr1. IWt;y Cullwna, Mra. Lealie Price, Mrs.
Charles Cohen, Mrl.. Joe Gloeckner, and Mra. Ellen 'lllerobach.

bullne11 ae.slion.
-~ !rom Melp Couot;y
booldoo those named were Mra.
,_ala Freckor, Mro. Bea-

Read It lhe motllns WOS a lettar from Mloo LudDo Smith,
the cbaptor'• second [WOaldont,
w11o romalna a [llllont at Jolele•
- a l HoiiiJltal. Mrl. lolarpr11 PariiOII at RutiiUiil lllld Mill
MlltlrOd llaWIOI' ol Mlddlo!lorfl
bolll put prea-, woro un-

.
tholllt .iiU ....

HAVE YOU HEARD?

••• you can get up to three years clothes
drying for DOthlngl Mrs. Martha Dervin of Canton, Ohio

Bak•' s Radio

Aut:tlon.

knows a bargain when she sees one: "I compared prices on both kinds of
dryers with the same features and saved about $37 on the electric model.
The salesman told me average operating costs are about $1 a month so
I'm getting the first 3 years of operation for nothing." Flameless electric
dryers offer~ for~ money, with absolutely no combustion dirt, fumes
or "hot spots" to yellow or hann delicate fabrics-:-see the newest models
at your appliance dealers.

Wocl, 8:45 Ul.

IIMP,0-1390
On pur 41ol

Tho
..... Gill Ill tho tablOI for t b 0
luac- which "'' holtlid IV tho
MeArtlln' leal'hon. Palrfll!le
moale wai ~II¥ lbo ·ili'l..
e!toi-u• 1rom lhe
·Cilulib'

observance of four holidays

So?M tnterpriling manU/acturtr U going to come
up with a bozful of port.
able IIUnt:t for those who
don't awr~ciatt the portabk radio.
,

eare. ~' She aald

gatdenl beQuse they bloom when
rew other plants do, after spri.rc
QoworiiW bulba, but before peonies and phlox.
Mra. Mccain said lris make a
nice border and ean be effective

It WU IMOUnead tbMtM Mardt

was held at the conclusion ot tbe
meetirc, Mills F~.ilh Mcc..:.alnpia.yed several selections on the p i-

Six Teachers Honored

011 Monday.

• • •

the

Whahoy.

IIIIo line with federal lawo on

na.

ucauHI of

W!Diam Eieblnpr WIXI tile prilel for the quiz. Retrolbmento
were serVed by the holteas to
tllooe nemed and Mro. WDbur
Bali-.¥, Mra. Scott Folmer, MrL
Uelen Goetl, Mro. CIWorcl Lelf.
belt, Mro. W. A, Morpn, Mrs.
Horner Radford, ond loin. Welby

wed.

Clerical Changes

After An Dlneas," by Mra.

Mr•.

quette, [)..Toledo.
In the House Mon:tay night,

money callected ~
,der the fedenl income lax surto after June 1, 1969.
Three bills were passed in acti v!cy Monday.

a mlnlmum or

Youn." 1be Club's amtversary
Mra. catherine Welsh, Mrs. dlmor wiD ba held at the HartThmnaa Heme a,-, Mrs. Paul Cas- ford United Mothodlot Church In
et, and Mrs. Don Mullen attend- March. A prosram oo horticuled the d•nery meetlnc or the ture wu given by Mr1. W. T.

Vau(lban, Mra. Ben Neutzllns,
Mra. R&amp;J Rlna. Mro. TroD Scboonleb, Mro. Kirk McCIIIIIallan,
Mrs. Kly Dodderer, Mrs. Ned

ard; "Couill Is No EArly SiYmPtom ot l..uq: Cancer," ~ Mrs.
Wllllam GrueNr; "lc Cramps,.
by Mrs. WIDiam Folmer, and
''Health Hints," by
George
ildmer.
Mra. Ethel Grueser and Mro.

R-Ft..n.y; Morris Jackson, ()..
Cleveland; Charles Carney, ()..
Youngstown and Marigene Vali-

~

ary.

seaaea" by Mrs. Fred Goelleln;
Arlee Abbott;

Colllns, R-lronton; John Weeks,

states

Mr. anll Mra. Georp Mowrey, Sr., wen at Weston, W,
VL, over the weekend ror tbe
runeral services of Mre. Ethel
Ricer who died in Pasadena,
Cali!. Mn. Ricer ill the mother
of Mrs. George MOIIf'rey, Jr.
Funeral "rvlcea were SatuJ'da¥.
The ~~~~~~ Mro. BID Rof&gt;.
e rts ancl
ee children JXnr ot
Mlddletolfn
alted In Pomeroy
Saturda)o. Thf)\ were callera at
the heine of Mr~ and Mrs. Pat.rlek Loehary. The Rev. Mr. Roberta Ia a rormer rector or the
~laeopal Church In PomerO)'.
Mr. and MrL Patrick Loohaey
v!olled SundoJo and Monday In
Columbua with Miss Helen L«h-

Torry Phalln, Mr1.

Common Cold," by Mr1. Mark
Gnae1er; "Treatment of High
Fever,~' by Mrs. Amos Leon-

sens. Oakley c.

ec.

Ewiog.

read from several otiiiDr citizen• ot the comniUnJty who received. holiday lreato from t h e

u

Sponsoring lhe bill Monday

dent in a tamily, Up from the
present $600 deduction. The sec0111 resolution would urge
gress to return to the various

Mrs. Robert Gardner of Colwnbus was • fisltor last week
or her mother, Mrs. PhU Wil·
lllm~Gr~. She came e.apecla.Uy for
the runeral aervlce1 or Henry

"Are YIN Ullllo Irlo lor All
'I'he7 Ale Worth?" waa the tap.
tc used by the prcJI!'IIIl chairman, Mrs. Loia McCain. when
the Role Garden C1W met reeelllly It hor Mecatn hm1e.
"tria," she said, Hfs a bar·
dy, ..,._lived perennial laldn&amp;

Kemelll Grltnth. An 1ipron sale

lumt, Mrs. Harold Dersbaeh.
and Mrs. Albert Smith winning
prizes.
Mre. Jack Caney woo
croup.;;.•.
"IW'dolir
jlrft~.
.._
.... - ·
MrL~AJno, ~ gave deOthera on the pit list were
votioaa 'u11D1 two medltaUona,
Mrs.
Palty Neutzllng, Mrs. Mar"The Promln or H1a Comint''
vin Burt, Mra. Renzo Menehlni,
and "TIIank God."
The proaram lneh- the fol- Mrs. George Nesselroad, Mra.
lowing artlcleo, "Incurable Dl- Brenda CUnnln(lbam, Mrs. Leo

Fluoridation has been a controversial issue in Ohio in reeert yaar.a and the. Mate Su- .
prerne CO\.Irt has ttJheJd the

One resolution would ask c~
gress to provide $1,500 lncome
tax e,:emptions tor ea-ch depeJ'Ioo

Fund

commun1ea.Uona from

The bill was backed by the

lll.ght were:

to

A contribution wao made to
the heart fund when the RO&lt;k
!t&gt;rlns• Be- Health c 1 u b
met 'nwrlday It the homo of
Mro. Harold Blackoton.
Read at the meet1n1 -eted by ,Mro. Dhe! Grueser were

1971 of all public water sup-

Ohio Citizens

meetllv with tho

the

opened

Sardi's with her Australian ailky
pap in matching mink coats .••.
••Sidney had his mink coat before Joe Namath did," Leslie

Use of Iris Described

euaMd the constltudon and by- menta to be ,Presented iCK" readand deelded on chups to IIW at the March meetiog.
The f-'tbroaey almarac was
be made. Mra. Jame• stool ancl
Mra. John Arbaugh were appoint- read by Mrs. Glen stout. and
ed to make the proper amend- the verse or the ·month b) Mra.

laW&amp;

I' )

'

v._

''FASTEN YOUR SAFETY BELT''
...

.

(" .

111&amp;11 Sdlool
lhe . . , _
at Vlrilnla AQI!n'~: .
._.. JIIf(dc~

tl-.;"

'lolfL
""'
~·

.

•

'

'

Mov~ 1m tO~f.lAMELESs e~rlo ~lothes drv

.... lho -'--....
..,..
- ~·
Vol011- A. . . .

Ill•• Mart

.

-'

'I

~~ .l

'

·)·1£~-,,'•.

'

'

&lt;o

'

-" !

••

'
'

,.,

,,

'

·'·.

•
·!t'"'

.
'

•

�·A~iiTILE7uOMEWoRK' Watching Want Ads Brings Top Grade Results
WANT .0
INFOAMA TIOM
D~AOLINU

5 P·"' · 0.)' lof.re P.. liut ~ ­
Mondey 0..411.- 9 • ·• ·

Ceneelletion• &amp; Cor .. ctione
Will M ecce,..etll Ul'ltll 9 . .... f.,
De)' J Putlllcatlon

REGULATIONS

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

1..1hnte For S.le

HOBSTETTER .
REALTY

•tor Co.

Thl Pulllieh.H ,.,.,,.,, thlo •6tht
.. erUt ., n~i•ct onr ode He-d ..,.
fMtlo-1. The ,u41olitt..• will rtat
lie reepontiblo for - • thon ,,..

CHEVELLE MALIBU ·~;ic·;;~V~~;;··p;;;;~;~rrJ:
-i196.'
Door. Local 1 OIWner car 1 6
envine,
intrans. Turquoise over white finish. Spotleu

RATES
fer Weill' "d S.rvlco

1964 FORD GALAX! E .......................,. .......... ,....... ,.$995

·--· .....,......
$

12

Cllll'l poiiJ 'flllorill OM i ne .. flon

Mlni"'u"' Cho•r 7Sc
per word tlor- CoMICU•

Clnll

500 H.T. Cpe. VB engine, automatic. Wh1te ftnllh.
Clean interior, good w.w. tires . R&amp;H.

1964 OLDS CUTLASS Fl5 ............................,......... $995

lfllllrfions
25 per Uflf Di.counl on paid odt

Cpa. Vinyl interior. Bucket sect, VB engine. Auto-matic trans. Power steering . R~H.

CARD Of THA.NI(S &amp; OBITUARY
Sl .5() ''" SO word l'lli niii'Oufl''- Eo
addiU6ftOI word 2c.

BLIND ADS
Atfditional 1Sc Choro- pet A.dver·
tleemenl

Po~p~~~!Es.~!!~~ Co.
POMEROY, OHIO

C•rd Of Th•nk1
tlST BffiT!IDA Y observance '

@)

1'165 CIIEVROLET Impala two.
door bard rop, 327 aulomaUc,
power steering and brakes.
can 99U547.
14-tfc

2-25-ltc

and family
wishes to thank the doctors,
nurses and the entire staff at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
PRICE

for the wonderful care and

room apartment. Amotd B~
then, 618 E. Maln 81 , 'f'l&gt;me.

roy. Pbone !19!-2WI

H·tfc

nTRNISHED and unfurnished
apartments. Close to school.
Phone !19!-5414.
1~1f-tfe

.
POMEROY

....Many ~~~o•e••
..... Sl.40 50
Jock W. C.rtey,
Mgr.

992-2111
O,en Til 6 Dolly

Gallia, Meigs

ns. ...

ONLY 1,11.95
"'" 2.1t . . . .1 '••

.....
..r-::·..
.....
...
......
,.u, C'........

On Honor Roll

-GUARANTEEDPHONE !192·2094

••• ......

hilt Itt ••••

tlr•..

.., • • •

I~

P.toli'S
·
POitiiOY

'

,.•• ,., "••• &amp; ....

•. MA

'

.

'

ss.55

wt.l .. , .......

......, •

;

Wlleel Alltnlltnt

"""'1..
....7,. ..... ..., ......
t... II f. y "'1-.

Lhwl

Students Rate

EXPERT

SPEQAL
SHOW TIRE SAL I

business, or nlocatlon.

Good access:
:t1 ACRES - 15 of bottom land.
8 room house. barn, i!:&amp;ra~.
other buildings. Mmerals. lsi
lime olle&lt;ed. Only 15.000.00
TOBACCO BASE FOR RENT
HELEN or VIRGR. TEAFORD
sYRACUI!E
2-25-Stc

For Sale

For Sale or Trade

I sincerely wish to thank my
many dear friends of Meigs
For Rent
County and elsewhere for the 4 ROOM buuse with batl!, fur·
beautiful birthday cards and
nlshed on Union Ave. Utllltles
rotes you s~nt me. Wish 1
oot inctnded. Pllone 992-3338.
rould meet and thank each
Z.~l&lt;
one per!011ally.
Albert G. Reuter.
UNFUIINISIIED large five
JESSIE

1't!'W

OFFICE HOURS

I :JO a .m to .5 :00 p.m. Dolly
lr30 o.m to 12 :00 Noon ~turday

DIRECT DRIVE
CHAIN SAWS

...

606 E. !Min PoMroy, 0.

EIJhiJ".one stucle.U have been
lilted on the Dean's Merit Boll at
LAMPS eleetrlfted, conversion~, Rio Grlllde COllege at tbe end
lamp parts, elllmneys, shades, c1 the nut semester. To be namwiring. Lee Rudlllll, 1411 J..e. ed to the Dean'• MeritRoll,a stu-

'lEW 1968 Zig Zag IIE'Wing

l-lf-121p

CURTll!S CAm.E Breeding
cldne In lOVely cabinet. AutC&gt;Service. l'tlone Parter 11112matlc zig zag to ,..., on boJt.
2281 Pomeroy or ee'l.mil Cool!GM. make buttonholes, 111011().
ville call station.
2-14-31lte
gram and fancy design by
turning a single dial . Left In
· SEPI'IC tanb cleaned. Mlller
layaway and never used. Pay
Sanitation, Stewart, Oblo,
off SS6.80 ~ tenns fl.25 week·
Pbune ·
2-u.tfc
ly. Pllone 992·2615.
2-25-61c

ELECTROLUX varuum d...,_
er «JmPiete with attachments,
paint spray, APD cordwlnder. Looks and cleans like new.
Pay oil balance of ! pay.
ments at !&amp;Jill monthly. Pllone

kindness given to her and the
family during her recent stay 'f'RAILER tal'S, Bob's MobDe
there . we also want to thank
Court, Syracuse, Oblo on stale
--·
24«c
the ministers and friends for
Rt. 121, Phone 9112-:1951.
their visits. prayers. cards
a.u.tfc REPOSSESSElD Kilty Vacuum
cleaner in exceUent eondttion.
and nowers. May God bless
Has
all eleanlng allaelmtents
yo&lt;1 all.
HARMONY apariments - S
Including buffer and demotl&gt;
Jessie Price and Famlly
and t rooms, furnl8bed, new
1-25-ltp
er.
Sella MW for over $200.
walls, floors . furniture. prt.
Pay oil I payments at fi.IO
vale parking. Out of all flooda,
montl!ly. Guaranleed. Pbone
Notice
3 blocks from Pomeroy pool .
office, JI92.S392 from 10 a.m.
-·
2-ts«c
I WILL NOT be responsible ror
to
6
p.m.
l+llc
an,y debts contracted b.}' 1ny~
illl TO 100 ACRE I"ARM with
one other than myself. Signed:
one or two bouoeo In Melp
Carroll W. Johnson, Rt. 3, POOl! ROOM fumlsl1ed apaJt.
County, reuonaiJie. Call 11112ment. Pltone 11112-3658. 2-ll·tfc
Pomeroy, Ohio.
2HI.
2-2!-!lp

semester.
Gallla and Mella Countlans,
named to the Dean• s Merit Roll
are: John G. Bailey, Pomeroy;
Jerry M. Bames, VInton; VIncent E. Braun, Gallipolis; Walter Brown, Galllpolla; Jobn H.
Dalley, Gallipolis; Freddie J.

BLAETTNAR'S
EIPEIIENCED

"'~­
!UILT IN ceNTRAL

MEMORIAL EVER
CITY.
DON'T~LPA.

car-

I-I~

C. C. BRADFORD
AucriONEER
Cemplelo llenloo

Mtll!l
llaelae.
Crill Bradlonl

'*'

I l tre

Am coNDmONING Relrtger·
aUon service. Jack's RefrlgeraUon, New Haven. hone
11111-10'11.
4 • tre
READY • MIX concrete dellv·
ei'Otl rtgbt to your project.
Fast and easy, Free esU·
mates. Phone 9112-3284, Goeg..
leln Ready - Mh&lt; Co., Mlddl.,
par!, Oblo,
I SO tic

'1'0\J CAN ~eLF'
PEOI't.E R~­

YOU'lll ASKED FOR ITI

MEMI!ER
\tlt.IROLD

e

____ ..

,,..,

5CHOOL.

FrOm tlllr Llr11• TN:'k "'
Bllllci&gt;oer -IIIII' To • T!lo
~eat

Heater Core.

BUEnNAIS
PH. 911:1-2143
PUT UP l,tt!R HM.OS,
e:.uDDY ... "THIS. 1!1. 1\

WHAT'S 1\&lt;IS IIJQRLD
CDMitJ&lt;; 1lJ IUHEj.J A MMJ

~TK:K.-UP!

Wl-l.to.T MUST WE 00
1"0 PRE..VEkJT VIOLEUC.E

CMJT EVE&gt;J IU"'l"- Doi.VI&gt;J

WMPO

mE

~TRE.£T S"F£L.Y

\IJELL. You CIW STARr
W HIWDit..); OJE.R.

/IV 11-tE S"T""Rf.ETS 1

?

..OUR \IJI'Il.LET !

INFORMATION
NEWS
preseats

LOCAL REPORtS
DAILY

AT
7:50 A.M.
12 NOON

3 P.M.
jiO
4:30 P.M.

THREE-room furnished apart. 500 BALES seoood outtlng bay.
ment 114 Mulbmy Ave.
REVIVAL at Plants Memorial
Pllone -~.
2-21-«e
~ ttUaso.
2-lf-tfc
Cburch beginning Tltunday,
KING TROMBONE, eooellOnt BUDGET PRICE furniture 011
·Feb. 'II, UO p.m. Evangelisl
ForS.Ie
Rev. Roscoe Thorne. Pastor POODLE PUPPIES, AKC Toy
our third floor budget sbop.
condition, pbone - ·
Rev. Edward Grlffltll.
Bater Furniture. Middleport,
mlnlature, $75 and up. stud
I( ee ping Meigs
service and grooming. PboGe MIXED HAY, SOc a bale, phone
Oblo.
iJI.Ifc
~"'
911U4U.
II S tfe
Gollio ond
....
2-IJ.tfe
SEE NE!GLER Building SUpSEWING
MACRTNES, nl)lllr
Mason Areo
ply for building your home, POTATOES, Phone 1143-2254
service. aU makes. WY S.
FOUR
ROOM
HOUSE
wltb
~..on&amp; lime loan avallable.
2284. The Fabric Shop, J'om.
Clarence Proffitt, PorUand.
Informed As
bath. Main St. Rutland, phone
Z.IJ.tle
IMf-tfe
eroy. Authorized Singer Sales
'14M485.
2-INI&gt;e
and Service. We Sharpen
Well As
WIIJ. DO ,.wing at home Sdasorl.
1-28-tfe
SAVE
SA.VE
SAVE!
Save your
zippers,
pockets, pegging,
REGIS'I'ERED ~ IInne
lawn. your time and your
Entertained
hemming, alterations, etc.
lnl!vldual• but as mombera of111
Colt. l'llone - · 2-211«p CIGit.RE'M'E vending macblnea
back. We have a ..,.. treJICb.
Mrs. Freddie Thabet, Mason,
untli'-.eenre knoWn as ''teen-er to dig )'Our water Une
and oervlce. ABC Enterprises,
HOUSE IN T\rppen Plalns. I%
Phone 77:1-S&amp;Sl.
4-30-tfc
Ma8Cl!l, W. Va. Phone m.1141.
NEW YORK (UPI) - Major ployers'
viewpoint by'¥ ! agers, •i\a,re not as lazy •• he is,
Oltdt Henry Bahr ~ or
"""'"·
7·rnom
houoe,
bam
and
league players and clubowners e:mcuti ve board of the as
ia- an! he reacts with the neceuary airdale, Honey? -H.
Roger Babr 91S-31158. H·!OIP
block garage on Houle 7. can
VACANCY for two elderly peo.
compassion. - AUTIIOR UN'Ibis column is dedicated to
appeared today to have passed tton to Federal Mediator
Ololvllle 9&amp;'7-37M.
2-2Mtp
pie. Prefer prlvale paid pa- 11168 SCHULT house trailer set
ta.,
crisis
stage
in
their
dispute
Brown.
The
owners
rejected
ramUy
livtnc, ao if you're llavlag
KNOWN
RADIO and TV ~lr. ' Ueots.' !'bone Mason, 773-5185.
kid
trouble
or just plain troublo,
over
the
pension
tum
and
to
be
Brown'•
invitation
to
be
repre-IlMr
Helen:
,
on l!o aere tot badt of Hartcalli. and antennas lnslalJed.
:«11
WLNDSOR house traDer,
lo.3-tfc
Tirll may oound silly "' you, let Helen help YOU. She wW aloo
fol'll. Like ..., , Lived In very Ill z 12 feet; Plu111e llft.2'188;
Jolm Harrison, Pbone 1ft. e.Uring the final stages ol their serted at the meeU...-.
but
I cry every nigbl. o-ver lt. welcome your own amual111: oneeotf.adons
to
avert
a
t.aeball
More
than
30
additlooal
little. For lnlonrultlon, write
For
sale
or
tate
over
payliD.
~·
I
want
1st. Berrranl dOl 110bo&lt;Uy perlences. Address Helen Bottel
strike.
players
or
regular
and
roater
Found
George Fields, 1308 E. 93rd
menbl.
MO.Itc
The
executive
director
or
the
status
UTIV41d
in
spriJW
trainirw;
that
nobody
could bello'" I~ My In care or this newspaper.
FOUND - 19!0 Ola• RiDg with
St., a.Jeago. Dl. 1111119.
lnsur•nce
players'
usociation
said
early
Mond:ay
as
tbe
threatened
not-mderatandlrc
parenta I&amp;Y,
lnltlals FOG or JOG, may
2-IS.I2tc
,,UTOMOBR.E Insurance boea today after a seven-hour meet- general boycott by the pla¥ers ''W e'U aee," which meant ' 4 No."
GOOD
BAY,
flr11
and
d
claim at 8'72 Logan stnel or
euttlng. 40 cents bole. Romer
~.aneelled! Lost your onerating with the clubowners' 1ttor.. ccninued to show liens ot U l ran away, ma.ybe they could
!"hone 99UIM.
~
·!IPJIII'S WORK unifonna and
or's license? CaD 992-2911.
ney that ..progress is being crac- Fourteen clubs report.. save eawgh by notfeedlngmefor
wllite palntera uniforms. Jef. Wlllard, Phone - ·
MNtp
I II tro
made but there are still thinp ed new stgnlngs or lrrivals In 1 wlille t&lt;r buy tho doll, which they
fer's Clolblng Store, Rt. ll!.
Help W•ntecl
to be worked out." He denied a camp although the regulara of can afford ID,YWI¥1 but won't.
lultiple
Pomen&gt;y.
2-21-411&lt; I'IIEAT----:-~
I.ABORATORY TElCIINlcrAN,
RUGS rl&amp;lrt, lhey'll be
ri!I&gt;Ori that 8BJ'OOD10nl had the W&lt;M'Jd clwq&gt;lon Detroit Whit obould I ddl - ST. BERChoice
Pltone 9112-2445 or 9112-:1132. or
a dell!!bt if cleaned with Blue Roekets Eye
alreM)' been reacbecl anll that Tigers were all absent from NARDWVER
!n'EIIEOS
1968
MODELS.
un.
apply In pmum at Melgl Gen·
Loslre. Rent electrle abamtM terms of it would be ClllllP U1d Mickey Mantle~ the Delr SBL:
IANT
claimed freight. Five new
en1 Hospital, 236 West Sec·
pooer $1. Baker Furnltun.
Couldn't yoo settle for 1 to)'
NBA
Playoft8
anncuteed Tuesday.
Yankees' $100,000-6-)'ear star,
walnut console stereos with
ond St. Pomeroy.
.__
AD
~
Marvin Miller, represent.ilw aaid he will honor the boycott.
NEW YORK (lJPl)... Rookie
factory guarantee. Nationally
the pi.Qers, 1111 John Gaherlo,
A.rncqj: the prCJD'lJ.Mnt players
LEGALNDTICE
QUIZZ
aclvertiand brands 1&lt;1 be sold CARPETS and life 1oo ean be Eh1n Hayes le sbootirw for the owners' attorney, were whO continued to honor the
SALESMAN. to eslabllsb "'"'
more
tt.n
the Nadcal BllketNOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
for storage and freight of
..,edit brokeJ'811e buslneos. No
beautiful If you use Blue JAI. ball Association scor!Jv title tchecUed to resume tllks at 9 bo.}'cott are Jim LQmorg, Dick
Cloe No. 20016
1116.88 eacll. May be paid for
mvestment. To help yoo get
Th•t 30Jen old •on who
tre. Rent electric !lhampooer each time he 1ights in on the LDL eiT T~~esday. The 24 Ellsworth, Ray Odp. Jose Estate or Lubert G. 'lbeiaa, Deat $5.00 per IIICllltll. These
li we• •i you h•• be-. oat
started, we ,.....••tee fl50
player
representlltlves
ot
the Saralago and Lee Stanp ot the
fl. Tiny's Bargalnland.
basket.
of
work for four yeara. You
stereo
consoles
have
AM-FM
celled.
woetly to men meeting our
HQes has been the piwt in clD were scheduled to join the Red Sox; Jim Fregosi, Bobby.
ahauld
...
Notice
il
hereby
pven
that
radio, 4-speed autnmat~ d'lanmeedrw: at 10 Lm.
Knoop, Rick Reichardt, Bob
requirements. Ail• no band!·
San Diego' a atteQJt to reach
ger; AFC. jeweled stylus and
.. Proere•• is beiDK made," Rodgers, Tom S&amp;trlano, Vie Gene Yoet orRaclne,Metaaeo...
up. Write manager. Drawer
ROONEY DOWNlNG
0 1. Put hi• up for
the NBA playoffa in its second
IJ", Ohio, has been dulJI ~­
beautiful
hand
rubbed
cabiacloptioa.
tald
Mlller,
retlectirc
the
OavalUio
and
Jay
Jah.natone
of
ar, Mentor, Ohio 4406G.
Real Eotate
seuon IS an expan~lon WUn.
eDcut« o1 the eo- of Luber!
net. Will go t&lt;J the first five
1tn101Pftere
of
~
thlt
the
the
Arwela;
Rusty
staub,
Maury
Z.23-3lp
0
2.
lloWI
while he ia
The rormer Houstoo AD-AmeriG. Tbelsa, deceased. late of
11%-!141
11leep.
people who call. Wlll be debattle
Ia
near
an
eriL
"But
we
Wills
1nd
Jim
Grant
of
the
Mlddleporl, l*lo
ca's strong-boy tactic• lifted lhe
livered to your home without
Expos;: Don Dcysdale, Claude Portland, Melil C&lt;&gt;WQ, Ohio.
0 3. Place • " Job
BEELINE FASHION styllstJ.
2-25-30tt Roeketa into a fourtJI place sUD have problems."
CredltDr• are required w me
hated' clu•ified
obligation for you to try arx1
The
M&lt;nloy
nlgllt
meotiQI,
Osteen,
Don
Suttm
and
Bill
women who like meeting peo.
Wettern Olvbion bertl1 and he
to help hi• fiad
tholr
clalm1
with
aald
llduelary
make sure you are completepie, sharing fun, lhow1ng the
...k.
mutt keep them there for JK)I"" which latted until 3 a.m., Sbwer of the Oodpra and Joe widdn four montha.
PetsForS.Ie
ly satisfied. Pllone tm-2136.
tcilowtd a presentatioo ot the Torre or the Braves.
lalell guaranteed Beeline fa.
season play.
Dotes tlda tth dol' of Fobn&gt;2-1!'&gt;«&lt; M:NIA'IURE ~nauzer - ·
ohlonl. Suppll!melll your fa.
The "Bie E'' t-.1 Ill euellent
ar)', 1969.
no ndnr ... sheddlnot TempormHy Income. Enjoy part lime
John C . 29.3
.....
~
.........
ary
allots
and
wormed.
Pllone
the leque and his 1,917 polllb
career wttll above avente UNCLAIMED LAYAWAY, 11169
Actil!l Prd&gt;lte J~
after
S
p.m.
weekdayo,
88'1·
model zig zag sewing madl·
lreado aeoood place Bob 1bde of
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
36
earnings. No dellvery, no colol
..lei countY
36U, Hoctmgport, Ohio.
1ne In portable, sews on butSelltle b)' 283 polnla. Earl BAIIIETBALL TOURNAMEN'Ill Chalnlna&lt;lo 76 Dayton Roooevelt Feb. 11, Feb. 18, Feb. 25
lecllonl. This Is yoor oppor·
2-25-lotc Monroe of Baltimore, lut B)' United Preas bematlonal
Ulna, button!J01es. blind hem•
52
t""lty lor success If yoo are
dresses and fancy stitches
Dayton Patterson 60 0 a y t o n
se.son's NBA rookl.e of tlw:
Clall AA
willing to work f&lt;Jr II. Pltone
,,KC MINIATURE poodle pup. year, ia third with 1,648 polN:t
At
Normandy
wltllout
altachments.
Com·
WrliJI!I 59
f111.3'703. Jean Trussell .
py; chocolate male, m. Little ti1nlllllh Sundl¥'•
Mlamlaburg
65 Dayton Col. Whtta
plete
price
$39.116
or
make
Clevelond
Soulh
71
Independence
Z.IUtp
Hocking, Ohlc&gt;. Phone tllltl·
WUt Chambertaln'• blr hiiV'
65
·eaoy payments of fi.IIO per
53
2042. Quality bred. Z.Z.Slc up it scoring. The all--dine pro
At Clnclmatt
Ookwood 76 Franklin M
month. CaH 1192-2836. 2-25-6tc
lanteci To ISUJ
scoring champ has forukea tbe Clncinnltl Roger B1con 58 Mil~ Ron 69 Fairmont Welt 61
"
AHTIQUES, dWiea, !umlturo,
basket,
except for an occaalonll
ford 52
At Troy
TWO BEDROOM Liberty mc&gt;Auto
eblna cablneto, old phonoTroy
71
llrookvlUe
110
point
e~lotion,
and
cO\cer..
Clnclnnat1
St.
Xavier
87
Goahen
blle borne, 10 x 55. with air ltl% RAM'BLFJR, ! cylinder. su.
S5 Olds 88's............... Y011 Choice $1495
......... eloclu, ml8c:. Leo
Irate•
oo
brlnst.
tho
Loa
33
At
Oxford
lomatlc, f250, 19111 Pontiac
conditioning. May be seen on
CHOICE OF 2. 1-4 Dr. Groen flnlah with gr- InRadlslll, 1111 ~ion Terrace.
At Columbua
lllmUt&lt;rn Tall 88 Klnl• 55
Main St. In Rolland or con. Catallna, V-3 automatic $2!0. A-weles Lakers the We1t.em
terior. 1-2 Dr. Htp. Gold flnlth with gold Interior.
2-lf-121p
Colo. Lindon 57 Cola. Wattor- Hamllt&lt;rn Gorlleld 88 Ltitle Mltact Leroy Denny or !'bone
belli IJ1 good oondltlon. Elme~ title.
Both pow•r equipped, both locally owned.
Chamberllln' 1
remalllinl 1011 53
amiG
Bailey, Danoln, Pl!one tm.
IIIIU'I8II for appolnbnomt.
At Clntoo
fortes
Ire
fteld
goal
accuracy
Cola.
Eaatmoor
79
Waabinatcn
W•nted
:&amp;.25-11&lt;
114'7.
z..2S.!Ip
Maasllloo 112 Loultvllle d
111rl nrboundo. He lead• lhe
C. H, 112
ANTIQUE.,, fumlture, dllbol.
Clntoo
McKinlll' 68 WeiiBrlllch ' • ''You1t Uke our ~If W117 or DolllllluiM"
circuit
in
tloor
percentapa
with
I
Cola.
Faat
101
LancatterReemeiniiiCellan«rus. lin. Howard Sl!l\IEN w.elo:.old pltls. flO. Am· 1118Q OLD9, mud seD, .....,.s
···
~ ·'
.579
mark
and
paces
all
lin
45
a
33
C..O. 100 W. Main St., Pome.
01 TIH!a, Phone 74Utl25.
going to Germany, Phone 992.
. .....,,Ollie
carom artists with 1,383 reAt
Dover
At Dayton
"'1·
14tfc
l-l15-31&lt; Z!lll, David Baker. 8yr8eUR.
trieves am a 1. 0 average.
Dayton Dunbar 55 Falrnua Eall New l'ldlldelphla 5I Dover ~ :
2-21-lte

---

YE~-III.Mow:De W'ILL
COM~ AND WE'LL P1.AN

WlllwSerYkt

deaths of innocent people on his
This column is for )'OUI1&amp; conscience.
3. The lazy teen-agerwlll seek
people, their problems and pleasbooks, plays and other cultural
ures, their troubles and run. As
material. He wUI seek and dlaoo
with the rest of Helen Help Ust,
cuss new ideas because doing
U "elcomes laughs but won't
Dool, VInton; Katherine J, Fad&amp;this i&amp; easier than feeling emdl):!ge a serious question with a
le;y, Gallipolis; r.averna Sue
barrasled over the diseovery ot
Gatea, PatriOt; JacqueHne Gil- brush-off.
. Sem:l your teenage questions to his own ignonnce.
key, Pomeroy; Mike Graham. Rio
4. The lazy teen--ager will eJYOUTH ASHED FOR lT, care of
Grande; John D. Grose, Cheshtablish and aiPire to high pis
ire; Robert D. Henry, GalllpoUa; Helen Help Us!, this newspaper. in life, because he feels this II
Katherine A. Hill, Racine; car- IT PAYS TO BE "LAZY"
easier than living secontl-rate.
Helen:
ol IIJgbes, Cheshire; Patrlcil Dear
This article appeared in the
5. The lazy tee.-.....gerwill form
La.Dler. Bidwell; Martha A. Mc- teen section~ our local BeiVer- a periKIIIIl codeofbehl!lvlorwhich
Kean, Gallipolis; Roy MuUio•, creek News, Dayton, Ohto. Seems dictates a mature attitudetmnard
Gallipolla; James S. Porter, Gal- a natural for reprint 1n your sex, because he realizes that is
lipolis; Heverly Rusk, Galllpo... y AFI.
euler than llglltlQI out of a ,lam.
Us; James E. Sprlegel, GallipoGOT TROUBLES'? TRY
6. The lazy teerHger will take
11•; Macy KIJ' Volborn, Bidwell; BEING A UTTLE MORE 'LAZY~ an active interest ln local ciYic
&amp;laan L. Wlnters, Rio Grande,
and church affairs, maldnc It a
Many teen-agers today are conand William A. Youu. Pomeroy.
demned as "lazy/~ and arerigbt- point to be Informed about currem events and government. He
full.}' referred to as such. Beavercreek High School has made 1 lm!Jws tilts Is easter than com.atud,y of the issue, and on the plainliW about ""Whf.t the oth•r
basis of t.hcl ra.ctswhichareavaU- 1\0' ia doiag," or llvtrw with the
able to us weherebypublilhth:l.s other guy's mistake&amp;
report or I the characteristics or
7. The laz.:r tee.,..,er goes to
the ''lazy" teen-ager:
ctwreh regularly aM depends on
,
The
lazy
teen-ager
wm
stay
hla Ouiattanbellefsbothlntlmea
1
i achool and ~~~ . ~ joy and stress. because he
'",J.§:;,ure ' that Is •
-llwi-_.Jiilolralballo eaoter than gOing It
scriPt... out the low
lite alone.
faci 70 per -cent oftoday'shigtt
8. 'rtle lax;y teen-ager realizes
s~ drop-outs.
that having enough will power to
2. The llzy teen-ager wW wW- refrl.in trom smoking aM drlnk1~ obey tra.m.c laws and drive trc, even when others ..ve the
safely because he feels that is "ay ~hrough their example, Ia
elller than going totra«tc eourt, easier than coping with the p~
SMITH AUTO SALES
...v~.
a nne or Uving with the lema these two hlblta can cauae.
cKAfr4AUG.A, OHIO
....,.ng
'
9. The luy teen-qer reali2ea
. that these eight point. aren't as
corrw as some people mlaht think.
10. TOO lazy teera-qer realizes
thlt most ot thoae Who critleh:e
·-, him and hla compaoiODI, not ••

pentry, new or remodeling, by
contract or boor. C1lnlon
Pierce. Pl!one 9112-2015.

-

and Brake S•vlce

dent must receive between a 3
and 3.5 average the precedlng

rna·

SPOUTING, roofing and

Complete Front-End

POMEROY

Business Services

111&amp;'7 RONDA 180 series with
wlndsllield. Very good condition. reaaonably priced. CaD
9112-7958.
2-2S.'!tp , tioo Terrace.

XGOT

TO SEE!!

Business Services

HOMELITI!

GEO. HOIIIR'E'tTEII, :\IIDDLEPORT BtJIIINESII Good moome and opportunity
for Coople. Be Independent
and get IOIIle where. nne location.
EAST MAIN - 12,000 square
feet of buDding space for a

terior. R&amp;H.

th•• i nt-"lont .
11 cent• per w.,d si• coneec:w1ive

oM od• paid within 10 cloys .

v••• W•H•n ,..._

THIS

·-

DATIUI/2
,_

Progress Seen In
Bmeball Dispute C,

WE TOOK TWO
INOIVIDUALLV
WRAPPED
"TOOTHPICKS

FROM A TAI!ILE
CONTAINER,6UT
NEllER USED

"""'

-

-.r

----

that-

Tournament Scores

•

-•s.

---

s.r"

U1Jt &amp; YAH lANDT MOTOR SALES

--

~- · --- ·~ -~ --- ·- --- -- --------

- -••·..t.4iit--' ···· ··~ ... -----·~·-•'"•"'··-r..,,.,.,_,...___,.,.,,"'"'"..,...,.,,..,.lflr·-·--

T~EM.

~lg~~;-r:t.::~==

DAILY CROSSWORD
.uaMI
1. AfriCan.
rlvor
•· Apoetollc
1 dlrarp
l~CllmblnJ"

ville

13. The whole

amount
1&amp;. Spindles
forwheehi
lS. Bln&amp;"le unit

18. mxeept
18. Exelama tloru:
otpaln
19. Apple
cent.rt~

21.hme
21. Under-

r-th

22. Ostrich·
like·

2.Sacro4
pletun
3. SlrtDpl

.....

Uucrambletheae (aur Jumble'

••·En'"'
louae

Instrument

4.Greek
lethr

one letter to euh square, to
form tour ordinary word•.

211. Sprite

• . Dial!

26.x.m.

6. Cltyntar
Jlarselllo•
1. ____:.:.Alto
8. Af'rtah

2T.Arld
211. Holland

or

Lincoln.
tor example
31. Moved
owlftly

va..

"· ~-·
•• l

WAV F"I&lt;OM TH'

EASY WAY!

.......,.• "•'""'

3&lt;l.lndlan
mUiket bAll

20.En&amp;'il....
f&amp;Urlat
21. Knock

rlv.r
""· - - breve

0

the Great
Lakea
:w. Sheer

worker

[]

fo'f'..AMED ~

II

U.l'rWJ'
32. Slope
:M. Fonnot

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

.

I '-

&gt;&lt;ON 109Ei

l I

30. Golt stroke

.;j!.,,_

....

IYURFIP

40. Branch
42. Oirl'a name
4.4. Obtained

28. J"aulWy
21. Il'kror-

PO'AJ:5iiC HeLP

- '

Tl'tESe17A'PS

I-

n

I-

I,__
.. - ... ....

"

'

-

hotel

.r
. I

(A--n '-now)

as. Prln.ten•

J-blno MUitC llfONI

~

YnltH'4aJ'"•

&lt;a.W.....
blt\1

liT-

.

•
"'-! .,..... ~

~~~&lt;-""

45. Kolwn·
medln

....

48.French
&amp; Cl')'pl...... cptailu.

river
•1.11:lmoot

OLJH

Bamlbal4
... A.bcnmd

WCH

.

D.4.ILY llRYMlq~-Hore·•
1o

•ow to, work
It:
.
.

LO!fo•at.LOW

•.-fW Osiotlror.
.

'

JLPQKH

.'

,'

~,

· ···j (

LXPHCG

'

~QVFCHO.-LKQK
,,&lt;

"faMs..,..;.:=-a•u
8ACB.J..Ol\l ·HAft CON'..
'
. lli:N HAVE wi'Yi:s.-KilHCKilN

seiJ:Nctil,

.

10 t ... 11:1.. .lhMures II)'Hicat.. IIIC.)
:i

·•

· ·~

·

\,~

I.!

·.•

forma- ·ot 111e won1r1 an an btnll.

fC" .dt.r Ute~ ~r·~~~~l.
'
,J}Ilt

QULTHGX.

'&lt;QZQKQG
'

JQKKR .C

·. 0no i"un~·,,..,
:rn W.~r~m)i. "ts ...
rO&lt; the illiee I/a, ~ for lliro' i:W&lt;I O'a, ete. I!Jitrle lottero; 11101·

~ 1111 IIOI,Itll\1114

XPQKZ
.

PWI;&gt;H ·1 CHWJ'XQIFK

A: X 1r II .. JI! ,A 4 !' •

·

ELJHK

'··
~ '

~-

. '·· '
.

•

~

..

... .,

#.

I&lt;

.,

,', .

~...

.'~'

\".

'.
~

•

. '.'

1-'

- •.

~ .

....

••

• ''"' '

,woY ,...,.,. 'lit&lt;. .,...,l'o~-~iV-.,·'' 'i "'~~·~
I

. ,
r

# ·,

.. A BOWL OF RAIN !

WILLI!£ Jli$T WHAT
'SHE NEE~ ...

Now arnnp the cln:led letlen
to ronn ttae IUI'IIri• llftlwer, u
•._....bythe-·•-

~,~~=-~~--~mm~•~I.[IIIIJCD

31. Wayalde

··=-~··

MIND BRINGIN · IN TH'
LADDEI&lt;' 1 F"UDDS'r'? I COUI..D
USE: SOME HELP!

DRA'lV

38.0neot

3f.Dutcb
Meuae

DOWN

EH-~-

ROOM -HAM&lt;:j

33. Not heavy

a Jaw

I'Ll SHINNY
UP Ti-115 TREE
AN' DO IT TH'

5TOR:E

prey

Sl. Youns J"lri
11. ArmjotntM
11. Footed

THAT MEANS
LUGGIN' A. 1-lEAVY
LADDER ALL TH'

·'t'..,.,""o

,.

,

II

.... '

,'

'

..

�o.. ,.......

Blacks Barricaded in 3 Colleges

MARINES

Don't Forget
The "Shut-In"
Send Flowers
To Cheer Them
Up ....

DUDLEY'S FLORIST
MIDDLEPORT
59 N. 2nd Ave.
992-5560

sen Unlversi\Y'I Newark,
campus. !llllman College In Til..
ca1oo10, Ala., and Wiley Collego

~ lo ..,·opero~ btlenlewa
then otoged a olt4n at the olllce~

~':~."~~

(Contlwed from - · 1)
bombers apllltttred L 4 million
JJ&lt;IUillls of exploolve• Into the
burgeol'ling Red build'~) which
U.S. intelligence Sol,)'s has an
ultimate goal - Saigon. Ameri·
can cavalrymen foun::l 200 longrange rockets hidden on the
outskirts or the l·apital.
Screamir'l! and with tO-pound
s&amp;U'hel dtarges, strapped to
their bodies. Norl.h \'ietnamet~e
soldiers rollowed a thunderous
mortar barrage into the rwo
U.S. Madne gun bases near the
"RockpHe," MO miles below the
Demili1ari:zed Zone (DMZ).
The battle began at -1 a.m.
and b~ 6:30 it was over. Bodies
littered the ravagOO Marine
carrc&gt;s.
'T1'Ie Marine losses brought to
150 Amedcans dead and mort&gt;
than
300 wourded in the
Communist offensive since Sun.

day.

In bullc11na• at Rut-

Ins .,.., IIIIUOIL
AI the State Unlvero!V ol New
York's 11011)' Brook WIIJ)UI, atu-

od

In

~

=h~~ T::.....U.

cupled the

who oe-

~..:•::tea;?~·

Ing at Pennay

-

verslzy were evi•Wd Monda.Y orter a """'~ order bamlng sit-

JliLIE ROSE, MANDlE ROSE ard Heidi Milhoan, lett to
right, observed George Washington's birlhda;) by visiting the
the monument erected in his honor at Long Bottom. The three
are members of the Cradle of Liberty Chapter or the Children
or the American Revolution. See page 2 for report of CAR
meeting.

Three Concert Dates Set
Three spring concert dates Ironton.
The purchase of a contra bass
were announced by David Bowen instrumental music instn.u:- clarinet and a baritone horn was
to;, at Monday night" s meeting approved. Final plans were made
oC the Meigs Band Boosters. tor the annual band banquet and
The junior high and elemen- dance on April 12 at the Meigs
tary band concert wUI be pre- High School. The banquet will be
sented on March 28. Senior band served at 6:30p.m. and the dance
concerts will be given on April will follow from 8:30 to 11:30
18 and May 16. Bowen also an- p.m. Mrs. Wendell Gerlach and
nounced the band contest to be Mrs. Ancil Van Meter were apheld on Satlmla:,y, March 15, at pointed banquet committee chairmen, Mrs. Pauline Mayer and
Mrs . Evelyn Lanning will ar .
range the tables and ravors, and
Arthur MIJ.Jer will be dance chair-

Heart Receipl'i

man.

Were $373.84

MEIGS THEATRE'"

Heart &amp;mda.Y collection&amp; in
Middleport totaled $373.84, Mrs.
John Werner, chairman, reported.
Mrs. Werner noted, however.
that canvassing in the community is not completed. The drive
there again this year was headed by the Middleport Business
and Professional Women'l!l Club,
which was assisted by other volunteers.
Middleport village hall served
as headquarters. Assisting Mn.
Werner there were B&amp;PW members Mrs. Betl3' Conkle, M r s.
Homer Forrest and Mrs. Mary
Kunzelman.

TONIGHT, FEB. 25See

"BARBARELLA"
(do her thing)
Jane Forda- John Phillip La
OLORC AHTOONS:
Defiant Giant
See Yoo Later, Gladiator
3 Ring ·Wing Ding
Home Sick Nudnic

SHOW STARTS 7 P. M.
WEDN=AY &amp; THURSDAY
FEBRUARY 26 • 27
NOT OPEN

Charms, tie tacks and trophies

oo be awarded to the senior band
members will be obtained by
Wendell Gerlach and Glen Sllaw,
assistant band director.
The resignation or Mrs. Eugene Conde as vice president of
the Boosters was accepted with
regret.
VETERANS MEMOf&lt;IAL

HOSPITAL
Admissions - Dosha H a I 1,
Raci.ne; Jeffie Price, Long Bottom; Evelyn Weaver, New Haven.
Discharges - Bennett Little,
Edna Stiles, Keitha Whitlatch,
Addie Barton, Charles Jordan.

BEAUTY
(Cootinued lr&lt;111- 1)
and made several peraona.l ap..
pearances at Meigs events dur·
ing the year. !!ile will be present for the 1969 pageant and
will crown the new Miss South~
ern Ohio.
Mrs. Maxine Gdfllths. cashier of the PomeroyNattonal Bank,
has been appointed by the Pomeroy Chamber. to contact banks
c:J the area to raise funds f o r
scholarships whieh will be among
the awards given at the local

pageant.
Miss Donna Hauck,. Mrs. Gatl
Hovatter and Mrs. Ula Mitch,
who were active members of
the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, on~ of th!
co-sponsors of last year's pageant, have been named as the
hostess committee for judges ol
this year's events.
The committee will meet with
the judges m the afternoon oft.he
pageant and will oversee the interviewing Of contestants. They
wiU be hostesses ror a jUdges'
dlrmer and will assist judges
with procel!lses during the actual contest. Miss Hauck will
also prepare the detalled judges'
books.
One judge will be selected
from each or the participating
counties and a fifth judge will
be named from the Miss Ohio

Pageant at Cedar Point.
F. 0. Day of Marietta has
been contracted to provide the

sound system for the pageant
this year. Day annually doe&amp; the
I!OUnd at lhe Melgo Count;y Fair
and at the Big Bend Regattas.
Mrs. Robert Crow Will head
the selection of' ushers and usherettes for the 1969 pageant.
The group will be composed of
students of the three high schools
in
Meigs County.
MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
The pageant will be staged
Admission - Leopold Hyscl1,
ln
the Meigs Junior lligh School
Pomeroy.
at
Pomeroy. Direction is by Bob
Discharge - Clarence AnderHoeflich.
son.

THREAD
NEEDLES
ZIPPERS
BUTTONS

SCISSORS

bank by mail
No need to be running here and there when paying your bi lis. Let your mailman do the running
for you. Open a checking account and bank by
mail. Save by mail, too. We supply bank-by-mail
envelopes free of charge . . . Open an account
today.
FREE CUSTOMER PARKING

~

l.ili ens ~aUonal B ir\k

CUSTOM
MADE
APPAREL
FOR
SPRING

R•member
Easter Is April 16

We invite you ro choose
from thousands of yords
. . . hundreds of excit·
ing new patterns that
epitomize the season's
new colorful look . . .
that will send you sew·
ing into spring. If it's
that Easter Suit ar that
Runabout

Oren

you

need we hove the fab·
rics you wont!

KNITS • SUITINGS
• EMBROIDER! ES •
•COTTONS •
Perm Press &amp; Drip Dry

PLAIDS. STRIPES, SOLIDS. PRINTS

"

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

11011 l ..t week alter the collel!O """ dropfrom Ito 1111 af
oporto. '!lie . - . aliO do-

N. stln..., to leavo.
Three la&gt;ndred II!Udenla ataa-

manded a

=

~oolball

beller:r=

THURSDAY
black lludles, lilac oplnllthe
EPISCOPAL Church Wamen's
11101 were ':'"T w Colo &amp;- ~ U:30, lollowedb)"p.-.
of vice Jl"llclenls.
ed • dve.dlllrt
Unlvor: ,...,.., dovotlona, Mn. J. E. Jl.
AI Rutgers - t o members lng last Weme....,.
.t
luclont• were evid8d from Hartlrwer; book review, MrL
ol 'lfoo Black Orpnlzallon of Slu- food, bolter llvin!c condltlooa, .:·~-on Bullc11na
T - Johnson; lunc'- comclonls (JJOS)IOizedConkllnHall
eued housing rule• ondthellrsley-edaoOllrt mluee, Mrs. Leo story, MrL A.
~ to dolllroy the ac:booi 1ng of a main- man wiM&gt; fer theiiDD~ bepnthe all R. Knlpt, lira. Dale lluttal.
IIWitchboal-d If ci\Y IJOllce lnler· was a oecurlzy ~ last !all ~..:;;r"':, unlver~zy re!Uoed ~
rored and vowed to remain until he ahot • In the IOI- reply to a llat ol nino ........
the administration met their dosttnson oet a 6 p.m. ~ negolloble" demsnd• made a Family Dinner Party
mand&amp; ror reerultment of more deadline for cloalni: the sehoo • week
br the ••steering comNegro and l'llenoRlCIII-IB. then e - the deadline to~ mllleea':, relorm the unlveral·
Rutpra' main campuala at New p.m. Nodoy. AI that tlmo, 1!11)
•
Given on Saturday
Brunawl""' N.J.
af the 300 i!ludonta In the bulld· \Y.
..~ N y alu·
,.,
loll but 50 remained
AI Stoll)' ~-, • .,
Mr. allll Mn. llenneth RutIll !llllman College, a pre- lng
•
.
•
•-~- - med Into the Qddonce
R' 2 ~-rtalnecl
c~o-•-- ..-• .. Negro school of 750
1be WUey deR'IG11tr&amp;t.iO'Is be- ut~~•u. .....,r
Depart -~•• of •ell, Racine, '" • en""'
"~-·...,
and Placement
m~..
• Saturd&amp;Y evening with a family
nee and roreed a recruiter for dimer party. Guelts were Mr.
the u. S. Air Materiel Com- and Mra. Roy Smith, Lindo, Ml•
mand to IIUspend Inter-views.
and Don, Pomeroy Rold; Mr.
After regroupin&amp;. they moved and Mrs. WUilam Burtoa, and
Into the omce of two vit::e prea- daughter. Lisa, arll Mr. andMra.
ldlnta. Dr. T. A. Pmd and Dr· Floyd 0111&gt;man and douP!eta,
,.- :1: ,_ •
branded sex crime
BmUey Cla10, Ieovlnsadomsnd Shelley ani Klmberly, CGiumnn'Je-.9KiJIRg
. that recndtmenl be bamed on bu ani Marine Cpl. Karl RutNEW ARK. OHIO - THE BRUTAL KNIFE slay~I'JI of an unmar- eamp.1s.
seri o1 Alexandria, Va.
ried 46--year-old secretary has been brandedasexc:rame. Dr. GeorKe
11le Burton• the Chlpmana
A. Gressle, Licking Countl' coronor, said the murder of Mary Laea
and CpL Ruu.dl were weekend
was done by a would-be rapist. He would not conflnn, however, U.t ~~.,g
uests of the Kenneth RusaeUa.
the woman had been raped.
I
Her torn mutilated body was discovered Monday at her home
by H, B. Kibler • production manager at Roper Co. She was his persoMl secretary. Kibler said Miss Laca had overslept in the past and
he walked to her residence half a block away to awaken her. Police
said he told them the door was parUy open and he could see the bod.Y
between the bedroom and livit¥ room.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lee
20,000 to start tirruJ-allll.a-half pay
Rictunom of Minersville are a~
COLUMBUS - ABOUT 20,000 state employes become eligible
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The nounclng the birth oC their first
ror time-and-a-half pay for overtime work starting March 9, Wayne U. S. &amp;lpreme Court rulod To- daughter at Holzer Medical Ce~
Ward, state personnel director, said Monday.
ledo voters were legally entitled ter, First Ave., Gallipolis, on
Ward said the decision to expaDd overtime pay was made~ to turn down a fair housing or- Jan. 27. The baby welsbod 7 lbs.
U oz., and has been named
cause about 14,000 state workers already must be paid time-au:l-e· dinance ln a referendum.
The court Mmday let stand Kristi Lee.
half urder rederal law.
Matertal grandparents are Mr.
an Olllo court ruling and turned
Tech schools on 18-lwur-day play
down the appeal brought b)" • and Mrs. WU!tam A. Lewla ol
COLUMBUS - PLANNED VOCATIONAL an::l technical schools group ot Negroes.
Middleport. Pater.-.! grandparin Ohio will be open at least 18 hours a day throughout the year to
The plalnlllfs challenged the ents are Mr. aM Mrs. Howard
"open tremendous new opportunities for persons who have been out results ol a primary electlm Richmond of Rt. 1, Middleport.
of school for some time," Gov. James A. Rhodes said Monday nl.gllL vote Sept. 12, 1967, In which a
Rhodes, speaking with Ohio members of the Young Presldents fair housing ordiDance was reCatechism Classes
Organization here, said a million Ohioans could have better jobs, jected. The Toledo city charter
better income and better lives for themselves and their families provides a referendum may be
through the proposed schools.
called on any ordinance passed
Begun for Youth
by the council.
catechism classes for youth
Soybean tax draw• opposition in U. S.
The ordinance would have
WASIIINGTON - SOME 100 NATIONAL Farmers Union mem- prohibited dlscr!mlnatory prac- of the Forrest Run Methodist
bers (rom Ohio, Indiana and Illinois were told Mondl,V the Nixon ad- tices ln the sale, rental, lease Church senior youth fellowship
minislration wiH give high priority to fightlog a proposed. soybean or occupancy o! property baoed were begun Sunday night.
The Rev. Wendell Stutler met
tax in the European Common Market.
on race, color. religion or nawith
the group and wJ.ll conduct
Clarence D. Palmby, assistant secretary, told an Agriculture tlonal origin.
Department briefing the administration is greatly concerned by the
The hl!lll court earlier Inval- the classes over a foul week
proposed European internal tax because it could cut doWn oo Eur- idated a similar actloo by voters period. Attending were Harold
ope's Imports or American soybean product&amp;..
In Akron, but the charier Sis80flt David Nease, Rocer
N..-e, Dan ~;e. JiU Wane~.
approved In Akron Roma Neaae. £iody Gooch, TttrWool option Sunday liquor
went farther than a mere re~
COLUMBUS - A LEGISLATIVE STUDY cornmttteerecommeJ'd.. peal. II apecl!lod that oo rurther esa Gooch, Conrtie Warner, ~
ed Monday Sunday sale of liquor by local option election, openi~ the open housing meaaure could be nette Warner, ard Lee Ann
doors for 18 to 21 year olds to work in places having a liquor per- enaclod without a majorley vole Nease. Refreshments were served.
mit, and strengthened provisons to stq&gt; sale of liquor to W'klerage In s general election.
persons.
The court Jon. 20 labeled that
Rep. Robert A. Maiming, R·Akroll. chaired the committee, which action uan explicitly radal
Connnission Okays
reported loss of revenues in Ohio cities not hiving Sundl,y liquor claeslfi~ation treatinl radal
sales amounted to "many mlllions of dollars" anrnally. The report
housing matters dlfrerent!T !rom
Join ina
stated many areas in Ohio, lncludit11: Cleveland am Cincinnati, "have other racial and housing mat---.,
been severely harxlicapped by the prohibition ot sale of alcoholic ters.. "
~ The board of Metes Counb'
beverages on Sunday."
The Negroes who appealed Commissioners approved a resothe vote In Toledo cltod a oec- lutlon to participate In the SouthAmerican facing JIO""ible atrilre call
lion of their clzy charter which eastern Ohio council ol GovemNEW YORK - THE TRANSPORT WORKERS Unlon (TWU) sald aald once leglaletlon was · - ment and 8llJOinted Shorll! RobMonday it may call a nationwide strike against American AJrlines '"' b)" the electorate, ' - " ' ac- ert c. ~cb .. . Ita repreat midnight Wednesday.
tlon 11 !lnal and ohall DOt be IIUb- · -.llvo 1n ~o~Dr~W• regular
The TWU represents 15,000 mechanics, inspectors, fleet ser- Je&lt;t to ame..tment or ,._t weekb' aeeslon.
vice, ground service and communications workers ln 52 cities. The without a general vote. u
Attending were Charles R,
union's contraci expired last May,
wf'lbe ftnal test foi' fair hou&amp;- Karr, Sr., preaideut; Robert
1ng propoaala In Toledo alwo.va Clark and Ralph W. Our&amp;, and
CLELAND ON FURLOUGH
will be 1o emvlnce white cltl- Clerk Martha ChaJd&gt;On.
MARRIAGE APPLICATION
SP5 Bruce Cleland, son of Mr. -· zens of the merits of atch a
Edward E.. Hutton, RuUand,
FREE CLOTHING DAY
U. S. Army, and Patricia 4'nn and Mrs. Walter Cleland ol Ra- Jaw," the aweal ..ld.
cine, has returned home after
Free clotldn&amp;' dQ' wi.U be held
Wright, 16. Langsville, student.
spending 10 months in DaNang,
MEETING CANCELLED
Thurlda.)· at the ·Salvation Army
Hq. 011 Butternut Ave. from 9
Vietnam. After three weeks fur·
Iough he Is to be statlooed at
A meeting ol the TWI-LIRht a.m. to - . •--e In --~ ol
-·~• N J !
hool Garden Club scheduledror Thura·~· ~.,.-,
·Fort -~~. • ·' or sc
•
clot.. - ls Invited.
lng In data processing ond ao- day nlibl has boon .....Ued.
,._
(Contiooed from
1)
counting. He has re-enlisted for
heavily on "Soviet motivation.,.
three years.
In murky weather, Wilson and

•lee~

117 ARNOLD SAWISLAK
Two Chle0110 aldermon IJPOak
of' racial tenalons and the
condldonl that ...... rlotl:
"A black-white polarlzahaa lncreued In the lao! year
and the ...... ol deep
dilturbaneea nmaln. ..
11 Progreill In thllllt )'NI' . . .
leoced vt....,ce eaeh alkod • iiood- The greatest advanwhlto and a black Ieo&lt;lor what ce• being made In hauling and
baa hq&gt;pened In the paot 12 emplorment. n
montho. Arnold Sewl1lak or
The flrlt observation ia troJn
UPr1 Walhington bureau auma Lean M. Despres. a wtdte man
up their
llndln8&amp; In the representing Chlcago'a ball·
loll~ dlopat&lt;h.)
black 5th w.ro. The oecond Ia

.r-

DeRl•es

Appeal

Singer Sales &amp; Service &amp; McCalls Patterns
115 W. SECOND
992·2384
POMEROY 0.

•oldneBB and

bickering.

aftd daughter, Sharon.
KILLED IN CAR
MARION, Ohio (UPO - Floyd
M. Bolles, 19, Waldo. WIS killed late Monday when his car
ran olf Ohio 423 In Marloo Coonty.

·

{

I

'

Ruth Bat1011,

a black community

leader, said '1be c:ontrontatlon

dollq -

9- ·

Jill •

. . blaSi ·-

Mparate...-,..,.ltla..,_
lually IOttlns _..._., (CONI- on~ :18)

Weather

&lt;

Tlmr....,.-llur-:

Mostly clouey with

rles throug!J
-.1 Wile
•lloo&amp;e Ill ...,_........_ Hlllo ...
day and Thur....,. ta b 1111
oarth ond 30s ond loll tea ICIIIIIILow toolght In the lllo .,.
the low 30s !lOUth.

TEN CENTS

lia NFO, chats with Dlek MCllllt, Bidwell, alter 30 animals
were IOided for shipntent to a NFO packer ln Philadel.l)hia.
· Meigs COUnty NFO membera are planning a shlpment sOOIL

Clay Bertrand is
All Imagination

+

NEW ORLEANS (UP!)- It
was Falstatf contrite. At the
eiXI ol an amazing afternoon In
cwrt, a rolyoopoly man admJttOO
he made the whole thing up,
"Clay Bertram was 1 figment
of my tmaghw.tlon." Dean
Andrews said Tueada,y. "I've
llldlocret:loiUI. ·.
been carrying on 1 farce." .
Aldrewa, wearing green JunMIM~ nMw~for Uncle Sam
glasses while tel!ltifying for the
COLUMBUS 01110 mGHWAY DEPARTMENT Tuesday deferise at the trial of Clay
_,ed bids 011~$33 mlDlon worth of cODStructloo projecta In direct Shlw for conspiracy in the
-'lion to .,IleparbHnt or~ dlrecll.e. Dopar-nt assaSsination of President John
Dlreetor P. Ei M a - reloa~~ed 25 prQ]ecta to blds deoplte lhe F, Kennedy, had no explanation
fact -..oJ IIPPJ"Oval ol·mlnorlcy group hir!lw pr..Ucos has been !s- tor his behavior except:
Illed to only - Olllo Cllllo!nJotloo llrmo
"Once you've made a fool of
Maeholer oald he jllamed to award the bldl on ledenlly sided yourself, you're stuck with it."
Oblo proJect• " w l - lido
11'11...,..._" State projects lDclullAlxlrews' shOCkiJW testimony
84: Atheu, Gal1la, IIOdsl .. Metis, MG!nle, Morgan, Noble, VInton was 1n direct opposition to that
and W&amp;lhl!wtoD - llerbleldal spro.vlng lnr weed and brulh coootral he gAve the Warren Commisoa .,..._ raUtu, Mal:a!t LudsCIPO Service, Gallon, $42,339. EoU- sion. He told the cmunJsalon a
mate $U,IIOO.
man named "Cla,y Bertnnd"
called him lhe ~ after
~
dies at height of criM!3 ·
Kemedy
was mW'dered ln
JERUSJ\IBII - ' PREMIER LEVI ESIIKOL, who guided lorael Dallas and asked him to
thrGocll Ita · gr&amp;Veot political aDd m1Uiaey crtsla or.the decode, died represent Lee Harvey Oswald,
~ &amp;I the bolllll o! a Afob-laro.li .-..mtallon. He waa 73. the accused assassin.
AI Fllah Arab ~~ claimed re_,.lbiii\Y lor hia death but
Tuesday ho aatd he made It
the premier's lll«!dd'll Jlllyalclaa attributed It roa heart attack, Esb- aU "'· NOOOO)' had called and
l:ol'a third ln three yeoro.
asked him to defend Osw~ He
'!lie cabloot met boun and 15 mlnutoo after hlo death and docldod to do It hlmsel~ and
IJol&gt;ucy Premlor Ylgal Alloo as Interim premter,pendlow rec.,nwwtatlnnl by Eahkol's MQit ,Pa1"b' on a ,Pennauent suc:eeaiQl'..
Political IOUfctl l&amp;id llro. Geldo Melr, a rormer rore1p llllnllllo{
..- Allllo Ebu, tile cw-ronl foreign mlnloter, wore . the mollllikaiT
. - , lo 1u.- Eahkol. TheJ el!presoed- thai the choice
WCIUid be Dolenao M1Dhter Mooho llQin, the hero ollho 1967 wor
CORONADO, Calli. (UPI)
whCIII 1lle Arabi
01 a hawk.
Some uss Pueblo aalloro had to
be balten or threatenod wilh
faill to produf:e
death before they woold talk to
COLUMBUS, - A MEE11NG LATf TIJI:;SDAY between oclwol their North KOI"8IIJI ~._ Otholllclllo, leaeherl, j1lnllta and .-mf oltroublodWoatHII!h SCiwol ero dlilll't.
ellled without U)o .,.....,... i-oaebfd loUowiiiJibe 1uoponajon ol13
Tbe varlotlooa In behavior
oludeat&amp;.
·
&lt;
·
anw
the Na.,Weet Hl&amp;h was clooetl Ttiood&amp;f ror the lecorid straight do.Y. toda,y ctJIItlnuOd IIIIIIJilOIIIng Puoolfondo.l' 1 lar10 gr..., or Netiro lludeut• otaged alt.-Ill In tho aclwol blo mon ..,. b)" ooe to tall their
D!JI . ~ wore arreatod for treoponlns when the reluled to relllm to · otori.. at •·ollnlfdrr 1n1o
their ~-· prl-i-1.
Tuesday olaooeo were dl-•oed ror a -n.batwaeli....,.ro
Six j1iDfe wore called te
and Ccllumbolo
~ ~~ l!r-I!Oi-old·a. Ejbllnr. Ol!lel.tl1 telll(f ID _ .
TwV
aald the
. was relatlwb' tr.,,tram 1&lt;!n•u• ~IICitderll'\JtldtiJ af Ulem hpo h1&amp;h .Pralle
WGUid be .
ioda,y.
,
{
,. ' .
I ·•
'
from thalr lhlpmate1 IDr keepInc I!P
(l:oat ID t • •
~!IW~:fli&lt;!+lll'llll!t8!!Jil'l~~~~~~lll'll~~ilm~, I3WI , Nardi .
· dtJi1lw IIJo II

M

-..u

&amp;'+M

Some Pueblo

I-

Men Beaten

agreement

more ...,...... ••

c1a.....

ilUJrl-.

·

' ' '

IOU-.Ia.e

·• r ·'f ·

..v..,;;,.,.i ~"C~T··.:,.._

28'-

· · · , ; ~T~.,..
,'rii(~,~~
Lnw,

.

''- '

-~"Jiot U.- ·
. "Aijti ·'W oOiil J,;:tt l ' V~ 27

1

.

YtJii;,~ ·

.'

~

' i!..trt:

pulled the name Bertrand !rom
his memory or a "fag wedding."
Andrews summed up in a
lonely man•s sentence his selfadmitted "farce.''
"1 don't have lAY explanation.
Mr. Alcock- once you've made
a fool of yoursetr you•re stuck
wtth it."
James L
Alcock is the
courtroom engineer ot Dlst.
Att;y. Jim Garrison's attempt to
seOO Clay L Shaw to prison on
a charge or ustng the rame
Clay or Clem BertraM while
plotting the as1111ssination with
Oswald ani David W. Ferrie.
Called by the defense, Andrews testified he hid never
known Shaw, who eerlllinly was
not ··Bertrand,.. had known
Ferrie but D8ver hoard him nor
Oswald mention Shaw, nor had
heard Ferr-i e mention Oswald.

In cmtpliance with state law,
all rural burnin,g must be done by
permit starting March 1 and lasting through May 31, Bahr said.
Permits are available free from
the fol1owlng local wardens:
BEDFORD TOWNSIITP - R. V.
Hellman, George Carper, W. A.
King, John Meeks arxl Ernest

Vercla N. Stout, Rexal T. Swnmerfield aiXl Don W, WUUams.
COLUMBIA TOWNSlUP-Jean
Hallie SWett e.rxl G. E. Ve;rtgan.
LEBANON TOWNSHIP - Ruda

Durst, Clinton E. Johnson, Harold G. Roush, John R. Sellers aM
Charles Hubert Stalnaker.
LET ART TOWNSHIP - Theron Johnsab, Roy 0, Pearson aoo
Eula Wolle.

Homeless
LOS ANGELES (UPI)- A 20 •
too wall ol mud burled allve 17
storm relliJIIOOI oeelib&gt;l sheller
1n a !Ire - . killing at leaat
nve, In tile totest In • IOrleo ol
rainstorms. that brought doalh
and dellructlon to SOUthern Callfomla.
About 12,500 per1411s w 0 r e
t.eDworarll.Y - • • loUT and
hell.qter. orews were ovaeual1ng thou..,... more stranded b)"
Roodwatars.
AI loaOI nine we r 0
blamed on tho klUer mudetl:loo,
lnefudlne a 1am111 af lour tnp,.
peel ......, 1 ·lllllslde oollop&amp;ed
0114 eru- their 111o • ....,.

. ·
.

•

CllESTEU TOWNSIITP - Maxine Arnold, George C. Gemelmer, Mary V. Kautz, Erma Johnston. G. L. or Wayne Michael,

,.,, •,•ll!!itijl!l
'·

BONN (UP0-- President Nixon arrived in West Germany
toda,y on the tbird leg of his
European trip and won (Jilek
assursnce of' tbe Booo government' s "tull oonftdence'• In his
plan to begin talks with the
Kremlin to ease world tensions.
Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger gave his pledge or support
in the Rhine-side Palais Chaumburg after Nixon declared he
would make no agreement with
Moscow that wru.ld impair
NATO. He bad gtvera similar
assurances in Brussels and
London.
The exchange of guar&amp;M.ees
came at the end of their f'lrst
round ol pollttcal talks tn

SAIGON (UPl) - North Vietnunese troops unleashing whit
a captured prisoner said was a
final offensive to "reunite
Vletnom" seized two v!Uagos on
the northern trlnges of Saigon
today alii then held oft 2, 000
U.S. and Soutll Vietname&amp;e
tr()(l)s ln house-to-house fightIng.
The
fourth
day or the

IJad Exhausts
'T' lJe Fi
I 0
ixed.

Kieainger's office ln the whitewalled palaCL'. heavily guarded
today by tho Federal Border
Defense Force and mounted
policemen who kept 300 curlrus
persons awa,y from the building.
Nixon arrived in prosperous
West GertnaDJi from I..ortdm,
landing in a snow storm th9t
was turning intO a drizzle. The
weather forced the NixonKiesinger part;y to travel by
limousine Into Bent instead or
taking helicopters.
In his formal airport statement,
Nixon pledged anew
America's promise to champion
reW'Iiflcatton of' divided Germar(V, He called It a ucommltment," part of three bade pis

,il.-.ral .~l. ,

John F.

OLIVE TOWNSHIP -

Paul F.

Andrt~ws,

Frank H. Bise, Gordon
R. COllins, Vollle D. Conn, C. Ed
Humphrey, Willard Pigott a n d
Glenna J. Sanders.-

dedicated to
''tile orderly
construction ol a durable peace
in the world.''
Although the inclement wea1her marred the President's visit,
none of the anti-American
demonstrations that occurred
lluing his earlier stops in
Brussels and London were
reported here. However, leftwing extremist students in West
Berlin have threatened to blo~
Seven doleudonta ......., his passago with huge demon- and nve others lorfolled strations when he visits that Tuesday nlg!Jt In the oourt af
clt;y 110 miles Inside East Middleport Mayor C. 0. FlobGermany on Thursday.
er.
Nixon and his German host
Fined were Paul D. illrrla,
began their political talks in the
22, Masoo. speeding, $15 ond
backseat of a Cadillac limousine costs; Charles Hamllton, 3Z,
(Continued on Page 20)
Middleport, $10 and 00811, lkiP
sign violsUon; Lemley S. - ,
to. ~COY. W. VL. $10 In d
costs, speeding; Hoilll W. Clark,
63, Mlctileport, fUIIIIill&amp; a r o d
light, $5 and COlli; Geoqo w.
push was aimed at saigon.
Cundlfr, 23, &amp;Jracuae, .,...na,
A North Vietnamese soldier $15 and costs; Richard
captured today
in ·righting 43. Cheshire. 15 JIDd - . , ·
Glue,
around U.S. Army headquarters speeding. and Glt11
at Long Binh, base for a 40,000.. 36. Middleport. $100 JIDd man American unit, said the and three da1&amp; In Jall, drl...,
Communist troops were told the whUe intoxicated..
Forfelllng bonds ......., lllrJ
assaults would be the "final
N, Daft, 32, Lancu&amp;w, I2Cl0,
attack to reunite \'letnam."'

12 Cases
Heard in
Middleport

may 'Be Last'
Cmununlst otrell!live sent sever-

al thousand North Vietnamese
attacking the villages of Dong
Lach and Ho Nat near the
American base at Bien Hoe and
Long BlM, 15 miles northwest
of Saigon. u.s. arti.Uery and air
strikes turned part of the urban
area into Dames.

E.-.

c.

Tlw nuJS

Communist o«ensive F"" _
inDicted losses on more Chan 100 ~ace
The

do-

..._

e.. bra - .I ,

SALEM TOWNSIUP -

Nixon in Moscow

-•WIItler

.,~

dell Davidson. George E. ear-on.
W. D. Musser, Jamea W. Nieholsoo, Guy L. Swadley and Wt11110
Turner.

SuTTON TOWNsHiP ·.:. f.ai,.
renee Beegle, Harold c::an.ban..
O. J. Gaul. Clifford Monilt Vv.
non Nease, Edson E. Roush, Rev.
Paul Sellers, Woodrow T. Zwflling.

--boatlljlr~--- UN,

J!tl

RUTLAND TOWNSIDP - . _

Bonn Will Bacli

Wood.

South Vietnamese vlllagos lnd
U.S.
bases, Including nine
hellc..,ten destroyed at Chu
Chi, about 20 miles to Che west
ol 8illlloo. But the loos to lhe
C&lt;mmunlsto waa at.qgerlng.
DETROrr (UPI) - General
The Communists lost 133 dead
- · Corp. atlllllllleed todo.v In the fighting near Bien Hoa
It plena to neall f.9 and Chu Chl, another 188 In a
C4rl ond lnu:ko, 1Dchlc11ng 2.4 maJor batUe
Tuesday near
mlWoo 1965 lhnJu&amp;b 1988 mod- Quang Npl 00 the coost and
el Chevroleto In whleh OEhaust 157 In a batUe near lhe
rumes could eator the paa..,.,r cambodlln border.
_.-tineal. a f t l the IQ.
l!Oit recall over amounced.
Since the lle!llmlng of lhe
The poaslblo entry af oxhaull oflonalvo early Sunday the
home.
omlaslorui IDto certain til the Cmununlots
have lost an
lillldred1 ol 'IMNnel slid down Cf!!wrolet - I a Involved OC· estimated 3,500 idUed. U.S.
bll!sldo• made I!&gt;IID'i&gt;y a - cure only ......, the uhlull pl,pa olllclals reparted. American
... 1 half· ~ rain d.rlni Soqlb• I' •b-ally out ul
po- lo10ea wer~ put Ill 200 dead,
,..,. .~'1
111 IIUon or doterlor-tromuH,• liooJtll Vlet-.eoe troq,• at tOO
85 yearo• .CIMrlllc ......,.r waa GM .said.
alii South Vlot:u\ooe clvlllaol
~·(or 111111111~
The U million Chevrelota Ia- it"' l30,
&lt;l\t!lollli-IIIV-.-aCoul- eluded certain Blec:o.vne, lie l
Tho lllhtlns did :WJt _ . ,
Qo, 5,4100
AJt, I'D\?IIa and Coprlco J111!i1- .4JI scoi&gt;e ' 1rith lhe c.mmuntst
ll!ll\l oi
.o.' ....,.. ell , for the Y-• 1965 ~ M,, olfenalw .or ~~ yeor but It

1

ORANGE TOWNSIDP- Harold
Barnhart, Paul G. Buckle, ftar..
ry E. Guthrie and. James R. Stout.

cotweu. Jack w. CrlBP, Gerald
K. Grate, Lauren Halfman. EIP
gene Holliday.
SALISBURY TOWNSIIIP - Nathan Pearl Bias, a.&amp;rles E.
Clark, Howard A. Dalley, Phlli,p
Globokar, Guy V. Reuter.
SCIPIO TOWNSIDP -!leon A.
Blackwood, Wayne 0..18, Ra,mond R. Cotterill, Reed Jefferat
Edwin Oberholaer, ~ H.
Stanley, Mrs. Goth ~
Kenneth Welob.

A ttack

Thousands

»or..,..., a.. tii&gt;Jialllkil

.

-~;-; ~- ,~. to, ...;. ·
~s~~f5~~=.., ·m.w!:. Jltj -1.
. ,U. _S.Arlilr,lllll ~ ·
.. T'V;- . .... ~ . ~ 17, .Rt.
:•ei• \ .2, ~~~ . ; ' · 1·

.., ·;.,;;, ..,...., '

high wind conditions ~chi••
any burning is dangerous. he said.

I

EUCLID POLICE BROUGHT former Euclid
Municipal c-t J~ Hobert Steele to ceDiral pollee alation here
~ lor nton llll!'llloniJW II&gt; the Jan. 9 shooting lleath or hls wile,
Marlene.
11&gt;Euelld Slrtlly Director Ralph Ilunl!er oald, "We have rormo- lhot w• waat to questloo him (,Steele) about." Steele, 37,
realaMd frcm U.~ euller this year in the .fllce of t.r associatlon llmla~ lnto lhe ethical mwllcaUona ol his ldmltted

! 3SERVICEMEN
RUTL
D
FU
ITURE
ON DVTY
UTLAID OHIO
'
!
_N.!!,
f
!.!!!t
................
:.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••..,
l----------------------------------------I

dlvWveneas
seen aa the contlnued problem.
Racla.l

Houlton: Progreu, otart1ne
before the Kerner report, waa
reported. Blair JuJtlce, lllman
relatloos aide lo the mayor, dted a long list of police cc:mmunity relations, youth employmetrt
and 8hetto business programa,

WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 26. 1969

.

'

CLEVELAND

••• tht IIII•W• Wrlltir Y(ishtn An Here

,.,

Boston:

e4. Lewla G. RaN...,,
de:r at the Jomo Fr1ntw
y&amp;ta Hause, Aid ..It
If ·America hal a 'l!ldcldil

ccmcUe thil cltt's people."

Of The Meiga-MtuOn Area

There's dllnger ahead for snowl!ltarved Meigs CounQ&gt;.
Victor Bahr. division fire warden. said today carelessnesa already has caused several acres of
southeastern Ohio land to be
b.lrned over. He stressed that the
practically total lack of snow accummulation thls winter ha5 resulted in grass, weeds and other
cover being ti~er dry, creating
a l!lerious fire hazard.
"Fires should not be left until
entirely out or safely covered,"
he said.
With March's fast drying and

G11 ol.~~ CQillriY'S firot s~ment or Nallo.-.J Farmero
0.-.-oa~~ )hettock outside the COIIIDI"'li13' tookpleco
'i)JO~.
' it .. old Smllh Truck Stop below K..,.up.
I.Jaa11'1fliliravo, It#. lit. 3, hlrlot, vice president or Jhe Gel-

and

HED CARPEl' SERVICE

'"there have been DO albl!ltantial
CilaneOI which .....Ud IJIIII"Octabl.Y
recllce racial t..slons and the
po11ibllit7 of ft.tture riots."

Danger o
Great
In Snow-HungryMeigs

*'!4

HOME OF

.In- -····a ....

has goUen worse In man,yWI.)'I." lli1D1C otben. .. t ,, ,.. ..,....
New York: No lmprovomeot Mo.vor K.oln White aald .. . . •
aeen. Herman Bedtllo, Brm: bor- There will be no security and no munlcy ~-.
. 'li
OU&amp;h .Pteliident, said .,The Ker· tulflllmont to ba found
a cool D i - . . . . wt~!f
nor r_.-t haa been totally Ig- •• long •• white and black ..... racial trouble In
nored." The Rev, Mtlton Gala~ main IJDibols or groups In eon- If tldnp i&lt;Mp
mt...._ Negro vice preoldent ol Diet. Tho hl&amp;heot aaplratlcn ol
Cleveland: llo
the Bovd of Fmeatlon, oald thla administration wtU be to re- .... ani..,...
In capJUle form:

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

Birth of Daughter

I

PHONE 742-4211

..
at

Richmonds Announce

I

• • • •

,

VOL. XXI . NO 215

Meeting

1

There waa some COIINilaJa on

the prol&gt;lema-- Joba, houolng,
1choola, poll c:e behavior and the
quallcy or loeal publlc lervlceo.
And even among thoae who Aid
teJiaion was easing there wve
lew eoolldellt prodlc:tlooo that
riots could DOt occur again.
Here are some ot the repUea

pw1J111

Devoted To The lntere.l3

!
I

a

pesaJ.miatlc, aa tbe
Chi"""' replloa domonltratod.
Some public ol!lclala 1poko
&amp;lowlngly af Jli"O£I"&amp;m&amp; 1o
eaae tbe problema, and other•
aald nothing waa beJDg accom..
plilhed.

gull

Y and the Norwegian VU!ap ol

~----------------------------------------~----------------- -------------------------------------,
Factory-Author~ed Sales &amp; Service
'

•

waa

were

black
and
white
Americana . and OUod a iiood·
olzed - · wilh pnlii0Ai1 lor
reverotnc tht IHnd.
In general, lhe replies dld DOt
divide b)" race or tho posltloo or
the per1011 lntervtewed. Some
Negroes saw progreaa and 10111e

A.

ke Elberfelds
In Pomeroy
Your
Shopping Center

Mlsa Sherrl Simpson, Miss Kay
Bing, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Miller aDd children, Raidy am Lori,
ol Sprlng!lel~ and 1\lr. and Mrs.
Vernon Bing and chlldren,SOrllzy,
Melissa and Duane of t.(crarw:e,
IOOlana, have returned to their
homea after vtsltlng the weeke-.1
with Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Bing

there

world'• shortest place
name• are the French vlUaee ot

-e

RETURN TO HOMES

and Blacks Remains,

white•

belween

The

QUEEN

Nixon drove to Qlequers to
break the ice at dbmer ln the
12th certur)'
manse where
swords of Cromwell hang over
tireplace8 and wllere a sense or
history emanates from the
paneled waDs of its great hall.
Nixon and WUson dined on roaat
Ayleshlre duck witll applesauce.
It was so entranctrw- and the
conversation ao st:lmulatlngthlt Nixon overstayed am
threw off his schedule.
TlcklishQueiJtfon
Officials aald thllt not once
did either man raise the tickllah
question or Brltlah relations
with France, now at a level ot

Pre111 trtemiUonal reporters by
.... blac:t. and CliO white
observer ln eadt clt;y were
almoet aa C!OOIU.eUng and varied
&amp;&amp; 'the riiPCMJMI to the Kerner
Commlaaloo report !taell Just a
roar aao. The commlaslcn oald

from .Kelmeth E. Campbell. the
Nelll"O oldorman or the almost
totall7 black 20th Ward.
Thq, and local pernmont
and conummlzy ........ In 10
-.- u.s. e1u.. that have lei!
the lull or d.U d l - r wore
aaked a1 the firll amlverAJ')"
of the Kerner Commlulon
report approached: uWhat progress, If ~, baa been made in
yoor dey during lhe past yeu
toward rellldng racial tension
and alovlallng condiUooa that
cauae rlota?'•
The replies given United

Now You Know

am-

propoaed

~

/

h court

Whi~

And Assessments of Progress Vary W"ulely

NOTE: A year
the Kerner
Comm111kJn rtPJJ1.td there was
a lfOWin&amp; fijjlt helw- black
and wtdte Amerlean1 Which
mlaht ~ 1D ._ate and
hotlllo .,.lolloa. Ao the aml•oroarr qproae"hed, Ul'f roportero
In 11 clllH that haft - r ·

pr:~.y~llll~ !bt.

u;•

Gulf between

&lt;!llrrDII'S

... nut

Council.

Sewing Aids

save steps ...

.....,.
In Tlloealooaa, 50
lloua . . - . remal;"'theboh:.
the chainedIn '::~ace ci U1 or-

N.J., do.a::; ~~~a=~ =:::.-Harold

The Kerner
Report . ...

.

lJies Tuesdav
J

tiraco A. Thomas. 72, a re\Ired Salem Twp. teacher, Main
St., Rulland, died
evenlng In the Holzer Medical (len.
ter loUowlng a short Wness.
!lhe waa born In Meigs Counzy, the daup!or of the lata Clarenoo Bamoe and Rosa Barnes,
~~ wiM&gt; aurvlve. !lhe woo a
ol tile Rutlondi\!Oihodtst
Clalrch and ollhe W.S.C.S.
!brvlvon In addition 1o 11or
lllcludo her INttbaad,
Floyd; two 111111, Kermit, Cfu\a
VIlla, Calif., and Jameo, Columlloll; a lloter, M1l*lll !Jollllor, Akroit, silt gnntlcblltlr!tn and

Tue....,.

·-·-r

no

....-...-ondchlldren. •,
m

Funoral ..ntce .... be.fteld
FrldoT at 2 p.m. 111 the Martla
Fwlera!homowlththeRev.ate1ter .l.oJilhy oillolatln&amp;. Burial

~

1

!

lntoxl.-; J..or-

speeding; Jolm

w. lsuco, . .

!lldtll_.,

Wilmington, $25, spaedlnl(; Jo/11•
rey J. Karr, 18,
Improper startln&amp; $25, and Ilallh
E. Lltchlleld, 29, New -....
$25, speeding.

Jack Oiler of
Pomeroy Dies

I'_,..,;_.
.

_, .

Jack OUer, 39,
Tuesday at 12:15 p. m. I I ¥ 1n1 Hooplt.llnH~W. v.,.
H' had lo m llotol1lt liar
ila.
,
• Ke· ll&amp;f -llolflollot

~ llaUitlll-

Ing ,....,,iillhaM
Cooh &amp;JI1bulaDco
ora
a VllloraDol .
Ins • •
from 1t.S1 -

oa the ho&amp;"ut griJUII!I will bo 111 MUo,i ~- ment ,.....
ll&amp;hll.. ·lflmatl)" _ , L Allied • F-1 IIIIQ' call at 1ha lllllnl "'!""claiW,o.'
olitt.~s ollU •bolfo""" the main homiOIIYIIme'l'lllr"~l
""'

and38,000olthleyoar'a · . .

tiiOdol~. wllll, ~~ 350 &lt;UIIe
~~-~
.

drlvlns while

ry W. Edge, 23, IAIIIpollo, •

.

•.

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