<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="16861" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/16861?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T07:55:35+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="50010">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/6847f53f299ab62a556c572d3d955ea1.pdf</src>
      <authentication>a64c250f33edb39591211e8d5504648e</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="53830">
                  <text>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, •

.

•.

�......
,I -

'1'111. .._.....,
_..,.

·• ,_..,...

s r.a
vn·, I Drt .. o
~-"'1.

~

1•

ADA S
BREAD
SUPER MARKET-Open Daily 9 to 9:30-sun.

7 $1

to 9:30

.
Comer Mill and Second Sis.

PHONE: 992-3480
"We Reserve The Right To Limit Ooontitie•'"

BAG

••••••••••••••••••••••••

DE-C F••••••••••••••••••••••••••
PU
••••••••••••••••••••
p
ELS
NESTLE'S INSTANT COFFEE
INTRODUCTORY OFFER

1 OZ.
JAR

Wlllla Re.tt, his .ftdde suffi.
ciently liealed to staOO the
atnin of acth" competition
again, rallied the New York
Knicka to a 122.101 victory over
the ' Atlanta Hawks Tuesday
night t.o crack a three-pme
loair11 streak. His return to
form with 33 points bolstered
New York"6 hopes for higher
finlsh thin third place in the
NaUonal -~ Blsketball Associa·
tion' a Ealtern Dhislon.
Dive DeBuaschere had a
career high of 10 assists for a
ai._.,e game, scored 22 points
aoo pulled down 22 rebounds.
"Reed's ability to move
arOWld made us a cohesive unit
again,'' DeBusschere said. uwn.
lis was ):ble to play off one man
1111 ~ plck • another as he
blocked 1a mmber of shots and
generalty led our defense."
New .York currently is ti/2
games behiOO secord place
Philadelphia, a narrow 120..119
winner over Cincinnati, and Sih
games back ot first place
Baltimore.
Walt Frazier contributed 23
points to the Knicks' victory,
Dh:k Barnett added 19 and BUI
Bradley accounted for 14 points.
· In other NBA games, Milwaukee edged San Diego 114~
112, Boston bombed Phoenlx
112.99, san Francisco t~
Chicago 101-99 alii Los Angeles

Best
Grade
lb.

NO . 2~

ROYAL PRINCE

By GARY KALE
UP! Si)orto writer

SLAB 8ACON ••••••• ~·49~
JOWL BACON•••••• :~29~
BOLOGNA:~~:~A:••••••~~- 49~
WlEN ERS :::H::::E:•••• ~~59~

MIDDLEPORT, U.

KEEBLER, PECAN SANDIES,
PITTER PATTER, CHOC. CHIP

'

ll · ss~·

16 oz.
lvs.

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

New York Dumps
Atlan~, 122-101

POR

CAN

roll

SCOT LAD
2-ROLL
PKG.

By United Press btternational
Class AA Tournaments
At Martir;s Ferry
Bellaire st. John 79 &amp;. Clairsvllle 67
At Cincbmatl
Cincinnati Hughes 69 Glen Este

55
Cincinnati LaSaJle 53 Norwood 47
Cincinnati Elder 67 Indian Hill

GEM

MOTHER HUBBARD
REG. 29c -- ONLY

SOFT DRINKS

PICKLES

HOLIDAY
QUART JAR

10

EGGS

49~

I~

CA
MARTHA WHITE
20 OUNCE BOX

Dubuque's

TEMPT

CLEANSER
SCOT LAD
14 OU\iCE CAN

LUNCHEON MEAT

10~

time.

Bottles

Dubuque

POTTED
3oz.
cans

HI·HO BRAND
QUART BOTTLE

Half-Gallon Carton

::~·

ONLY

49j.'f

Scot Lad
Crinkle Cut

Queen of Scot

Potatoes

and

2
16 oz .
bu.

Is ready.

l

PEAS

BOOTH FISH STICKS

Fresh, Clean, Green

2
·
·
KaIe.............. ~·~.. ··"
' ... 7~-,, .
Rad•1sh·es·.............
licit. 19
'
·$: :
...................
Cele

BLUE GOOSE
20 ,. 1•• lmg

Ohio

I

u.

edged

Miami

at Dayton.

ANTHONY
Pl111bing.fleating
Your O.,.,ntloblo
DNie~For

PlUMJING
AND
HE TING

''

2·WO

arxt Billy Cunni-.:hUn 2D 1.1
Philadelphia rallled t r o m 18
polnts bt.c:k to beat the Royals
and fW'ther dim ClnclnnaU'•
hq:~es for 1 pla.yolf berth. Jerry
·Lucas led the losers with 28
pointll aNI Oscar Robertlon
scored 22 points.
L.en Chappell's ZS.foot jumper
with three seconds rema.inirc
was the margin of victory ror
M i l w a u k e e, erlerdlng the
Bucks' winning streak to five In
a row. Chappell's 26 points was
a game high. Elvin Hayes ot
san Diego was held to 17, while
teammate John Block netted 25
points.
Bailey Howell scored 27 points
and John Havlicek added 22 as
Boston swept its season series
with Phoenix. Dick Van Arsdale
paced the Suns with 22 points.
A 1Q-.polnt spurt by Nate
Thunnond in the fourth quarter,
oiiiMhlrd of his 30-game total,
spirited San Francisco to its
close win over Chicago. The
Bulls held him to a single netd
goal Molliay night. Bob Boozer
scored 28 points for Chicago.
Los Angeles increased its lead
owr Atlanta In the Western
Division to three games with its
overtime victory over Seattle.
Mel Count's 23 polttts was high
for the Lakers and Len WUkenB
t~ped the losing Sonics with 26.

Centerville 64 Carroll 61
Dayton Alter S7 Eatoo 47
Dayton Belmont 68 Carlisle 51
Xenia 67 Dayton StJvers 38
Jefferson 74 Dayton Kiser 47
At Columbus
London 82 Frank.Un 42
Gahanna 97 Ci.rclevUle 59
Newark 62 Columbus Walnut
Ridge 52
At New Concord
Tri Valley 74 Maysville 44
Cosltocton 67 Cambridge 59
At Troy
Dayton Meadowvale 52 ~ring­
Fairborn 55 National Trail 49
At Oxford
Oxford Talawamla 611 Fairfield
57
Ha,mlltoo Badln 76 Mason 65
At Lorain
Elyria 51) Lorain Admiral King

48
Brookside S7 North Olmsted 53
At Bedford
Warrensville 75 9\aker Heights

51
Cleve. JFK 69 Cleve. John Hay 52
At Berea
Lakewood 71 Fairview 58
Cleve. West Tech 57 North Royalton 35
At Akroo
Buchtel 58 Kenmore 54
Akron Central 74 Norton 33
At Normandy
Parma 63 Brecksville 50
At Ashtabula
Conneaut 49 Jef'terSOil 32
Ashtabula 45 Mentor 44
At Cloverleaf
Trlway 7L loudonville 57
Class A Tournaments
At Hartville Lake
Windham 54 Mogadore 52
East Canton 80 Southern Local

71
At CblJIIcothe
Ross Zane Trace 58 Cltllllcothe

Flaget 30
At New Philadelphia
Garaway 92 Carrollton st. Edwards 44
Strasburg 76 Demlson St. Marys

59
u•AL ltOTIC:I
l:l.&amp;ANOI\
I"BANCD

Lourl or Commaa Pl..., M•lea CWD&amp;J, Oblo, Cue N.. 14MII .....,me
tor 4Uvoroe frvm ..14 ll••nor Frail·
WI JtauU GA tiw lftMIIIda 61 UVUMI
.m~ell¥, · 81:1.d pou ftetleet of 4ulf,
ullll oU.... pnprr relief. IUd Cf.Uie

wiD bl ror hemna on or after thl
lJ ., APril. 1. ..

o..r.. ..... ,.,.,.....

'· ...... . . .

AfterMY ftr Pa.MHH
W k 1J; lt; • tfJ I . .

~

~~

LaSalle 23-1 Ends Season

_____.

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

... trif!d N'Uin,: lhr ('•ndy
•rrom door lo ~.· bu1 not
on• "'- bu.a,:ht
!'"

Mix Has
47 Points
In TUWin
By United Press International
Steve Mix took the bench with
five minutes left in the ToledoBuUer game Tuesday night and the 'name ot the s..6 Rocket
center w u tacked onto a new
school record.
Mix tossed In 47 points as Toledo overwhelmed visitine Butler Ond.) 9~68, wiping out a
previous record set more than
30 years ago. It was Mix's 18th
career record.
The game was a pushover
and Toledo Coach Bob Nichols
pulled all the starters except
Mix with II mirutes to go. lie
gave Mix a chance to betler the
record of 41 points scored for
Toledo during the 1937-38 season
by All America Chuck Chuckovitz. That task done, Nichols
motioned his star player to the
bench,
Mix has one more game to
play
l'or
Toledo
Saturday
against Miami and it gives him
the opportunity to break a single season record he already
holds. His mark of 576 was ~
two years ago. He needs 24
points to better it.
The win over Butler made T~
ledo 13-10.
Drake
In
other
games:
downed
Cincinnati
at
Des
Moines, Iowa, 85-68; Northwestern downed Ohio Stale 864)3 at
Evanston, Ill., Wilmington hosted an 89-81 win over Findlay,
Gannon defeated· Sleubenvt.tte
89-70 at Erie, ..P,.t1 • anit ~ ~e­
-ghenv whipped Jlhn Carroll 7870 at Meadville, Pa.
Drake woo going away as the
Bearcats of Cincinnati only
managed to close to 66-58 in the
second halt Doo Ogletree was
high for the Oltioans with 21
points In the Missouri Valle~:
League contest.
Tom Bessley scored 2.3 points
tor Wilmington as the Tigers
downed findlay in Mid-Ohio
Conference play. Wilmington
jumped to an early start and
widened It during the second
half. The win made the Tigers
S-12 overall and 5-5 in league
play, Fhdlay, led by Frank
Minnig's 24 points. is 10-15 and

9

PhUadelphla •• 45 21 .682

4
5\1
9
ClncltmaU •... 34 33 .507 15\1
lletrolt. ' ' •. ' 26 42 .382 24
Milwaukee ...• 22 45 .328 27\1
New York ...• 45 24 .652
Boston . , . . . . 40 26 .606

W. L. Pet. GB
Los Angeles , . 44 24 .647
San Fran. . •. 33
San Diego ... , 28
Chicago ..... 27
SeKtue . , ••• , 25

28
36
39
41
44

.600
,478
.418
.397
.362

3

11%
15%!
17
191h

Phoenix . , , •. 14 54 .206 30
1\lesday's Reaulta
Mllwaukee 114 San Diego 112
Boston 112 Phoenix 99
New York 122 Atlanta 101
Phila. 120 Cin. 119
San Fran. 101 Chicago 99
Los Ang, 114 &amp;attle U 1 (OT)
(Only games sclteduled)
Wednesday's Go.mes
New York at Boston
Phoenix at Philadelphia
Chica~ at Seattle
(Only games scheduled)

Tiny Fellas

Tournament
Is March 7-8

RAVENSWOOD - The Wahama White Falcons seasoo basketball record slipped to 9-&amp;
here TUesday nllht as Ravens·
wood scored an easy 77-59 triumph over the Mason Countians.
Ravenswood had four scorers
LilJA&amp;. NOTIC:I
NOnCI TO AOoa•OATI

VIN~I

In ~~econi•RH "ltb s-;:. 101.81 of
IJu Re"IMd Codl. ...le4 bldl Will
lN MHlvecl by till Mllllt county
ComlldMJonan ll'l U..lr olllce Ill U.

COUI1 HOUIII, pomaroy, Ollto 4811t
Ublil 10:00 A.ll . lbfth 3, 1... II
wftlch U.. 1nd plac!t the lllda wUI
be opcone4 tor U.. lolloWil:l.l t~m..

10.000 tou or No. 11 UmetloM

1.000 lou ol No. I

~to••

UIOO toM o1 No. II U•ntoiM
4.000 ""'- ot ca, Umutoal. WJ
ll&amp;e J 1M.. .
'
when

~

Nq,UIItiCI
,

UMI
'

,....u..

All m.teriU to JnHt· UM
1n.1n11 .. apeclfted b)' dlfl au.. or
Uhio. O.Pif1.•at of HJcbwaJ'•·
Btda t,o ,_ .UIItol)' 11'11\'ILed Atlnl·

.... ata on. u. oulltd.• of .....,~ope.
Til• CommllalcJMn teaerH
UN
J'iltlt · iO' ~ ,., or llll Jddl.

-

in double figures While two Fatsons, led by Gary Clark's 27,
hit ror 10 or more points.
Clark, In leading all point •
getters, sank 12 buckets and
three free throws; He also sat
out of the action several min~
utes with four lOliis.
The only other Falcon play~
er to get in double figures was
Danny Rizer with 10. Brown top.
ped the hosts with 20 whlle Gorrell got 19. Alters 14, andGranclataff, 13.
Wahama hjt oo onl,y 23 o1 80
shots £rom the field for a 29
per cent average whUe Ravena..

wood cllliiOd 26 ol 59 attellljlts
for 44 per cent. The losers also
hit 13 of 25 at the free throw
line oomparod to 25 ol 33 by
the Jack11011 Countians.
Wahama led tho rebounding
wttb 48 fD the hosts' 4a Dave
Cllllople topped the Fa!...,, with

~·1111:

:I.JI

ate

I

/"'f

',t

·,,

,.

--- ··--"

......

n

•

The ~10 Grande ~ollege Redwill play the~r last basketball game of the seasonal
8 p.m.. Thursday against Ohio
~orthern Unive_csit.y intheGallla Academy H1gh &amp; hool gym,
TOO Redrnena.re 11-11 for the
season and last saturday nlght
was runnerup in the Kentudcy
Intercollegiate Athletic Conterence Tournament at Barbourville, Ky. Ohio Northern
is now 17-!! for the season.

83.
Rick Moont scored 31 point!;,

Wildcats

pension fund by the owners and
a reduction in the qualifying
llmit from five to tour years.

Stun OSU

The negotiations produced the
settlement when the owners,
who originally offered $5.1
million, boosted their $5.3
million offer of last week to
$5.45 mi Ilion a lXI reduced the
qualifying limit Crom five to
tour years. That reduction will
currently arrect 78 players,
including satchel Paige, who
was put on the roster last year
by Atlanta.
The players also gained a
several fringe benefits including
an early retirement benefit at
age 45, more life insurance, a

"unimpaired and unlimited."
Al~h no percentage was
written into the contract, the
players managed to retain
about one-third of the TV
revenue. They had $1J.l million
of the $12.3 million in the old
pact and now have $5.45 minion
of the $16,5 million in the new
TV agreement.
Marvin J. Miller, executive
director of the Pla.yers Association, said Kuhn's action was
"instrumental" in paving the
way for 1 settlement.
He said he was !'happy" with
tlle settlement but said the
players "ga~ considerably"
ard that "something better
could have come out of it if we

·::;::::::::::::::::::::~;;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;::-

Five 86-83
LVANSTON, IU . (l 'P0 - The
numbers 86-83 mathematieally
put Ohio State closer to the
edge in dropping oul of the Big
Ten basketball
championship
race.
The score indicated the Buckeyes' loss lo conference roe
Northwestern Tuesday, night,
which pul Purdue one game
wio awa.11 from the title. Purdue downed Michigan State 7472 Tuesda)' night.
The Buckeyes were slow
starting and trailed 44-30 at the
hall Coach Fred Taylor shook
up his lineup for the first time
all season by benching captain
Denny Meadors and Steve Howell, both seniors.
Meadors, however, pl~· ed the
lasl 25 minutes or the game,
chalking up nine points.
The OSL coach Pilllled much
of the Buckeye troubles on Wildcat guards Terry Gamber and

Don Adams.
"Adams and Gamber hurt us
most in the second half," he
said. "We'd get within five or
six points and then make a bad
pass.
"What really hurt then is
they•d come down and score,"
he continued. ,. The second half
we tried to pick them Lll farther
out on the couc L We had the
ball trapped several times late
in the game. but they got out of
it with a long pass.''

Friday niglrt against Wlrt.
BY QUARTERS

WAHAMA •• , •• 10 28 4159
RAVENSWOOD . , 17 30 53 77
WAHAMA (59)

Rizer 4-2-10, Gllllapl.e 3~1-7,
T. Fields 1-4~, Clark 12-3-.27,
Herndon 1-tt.:J, Call l-1-3, S.

Fields 1.:1-4. Totalo 23-13..'19.
RAVENSWOOD \11)
Akers 2-10-14, CariiOD S-1-7,

KANSAS CITY. Mo. (UPOUCLA's tournament path to an
ull)recedented third straight
National
Collegiate
Athletic
Association (NCA ) basketball
championship was clear today
with the completion of a
maximum 25-team bracket for
the first time in five years.
The NCA.O\ Tuesday filled 10
at-large berths, including among
its selections three nationally.
ranked teams from the East.
The other 15 berths are
reserved for conference champions with UCLA, by winning
the Pacific Eight, being o11e of
seven conference t.itlist drawing
automatic first-round byes into
tlte regionals.

Nine first-round games will be
pla,yed March 8 at five different
sites, includi~ two In the East
Rhode

Islam University

four reglonal9- East, Midwest,
Mideast and West- will be
pla,yed March 13 and IS with the
finals scheduled for the University of Louisville March 20 and

22.
The Bruins, top-ranked aM
urtleaten in 22 games this
season, will host the West
regional in Los Aflleles.
The NCA
Tueada,y tabbed
eighth-ranked st. John's (20-3),
ninth-ranked Villanova (2Q..4)
and 10ttJ..ruked Duquesne tor
ttw three independent berths in
the Eost. Marquette (19-4) and

Grlttldlllall" 2-ll-13, Drown 8-4.:10,
Gor..U 9-1-19, Sluart 1-ll.:l, &amp;»·
der 1-0-:. Tolalo 26.:15-77.

PlAYING AT THE

GREEN GABLES

Notre Dame (ls..5) accepled
invitations to compete as atlarge entrants in the Mideast
ard defending National lnvitation Tournament (N]T) champion Dayton, unranked with a
17-6 record, landed one of three
at-large bids in the Midwest.
Other Midwest indepeOOent
berths went to Colorado State
Uni venity ( 15-4), which has
never won a game in four
previous NCAA appearances,
and Trinity University (l~),
which finished third a year ago
in the NCAA's college division
championships.
New Mexico State, ranked
13th nationally wlth a 21-3
record and a second~round
NCAft loser to UCLA last year,
and SeatUe (18--7), which will be
making its 11th NCAf post..
season appearance, accepted
bids as at-large teams in lhc
West.

.

,, '

c'

··.•

INCO
of thou le9ol d.d..,o;;tionl.
look no

·.'

Just ""'"•

yew. Trained Jll•porers "Will
tom• yom to•es.

'

•

furtherl

yovr IOK ,.turn to H &amp; R
BlOCK. Ther•'s an officao neor

11•1

I

, .em.~- 7, G~lll~lls, Qhlo
·'

' '

H&amp;l

FIRESTONE
STORE
.
.
MIDOLEPORT • .OHIO

•'
••

23" ADMIRAL T.V.

j

'95-•

Conaoi•H•
1 yr. pix tube guarclnte..23" G.E. T.V.
Swivel Con;ole

10" G.E.
Weighs only 12 lbs.

23" SILVERTON£ T.V.

;

'89M

New tube

TAPPAN RANGE
Oemonatrotor.

Reg. 289.00

1411-"

1

2 DR . G. E. REF RIG.
12 ••. h.

12&amp;"

1

CONLON WRINGER
WASHER

'25-"

!
~

----------------·~
GAS R.t.NGE
'111-" '~

FOR

Meet Yl!ur Friends ...~ Gretn Gillies

,..

AT

DON'T LOOK

DALE AND DAVE

.

BARGAINS

Filled In NCAA Tourney

To 9•1 the futl lioro's 1hore

.

r---------.
.
TRADE-IN

10 At-Large Berths Are-

and North carolina State. The

Ravenswood also won the re=
sene game 60-51. Halstead led
the Wahama reserves with 11.
Wahama wiD end its re~ar
season schedule at home this

had been given somethi~ clole
to unanimous support."
The players ortglqilly alked
ror $6.5 million and had scaled
down their demands to $$.9
million and ne admitted the
defections had hurt the players•
cause.
Most of the player representa-.
lives from the 24 clubs were on
hand at the meetil'lg with Miller
and JOO.n Gaherin, the owners"
representative, to give their
recommendation to the settlement

6 mos., guo ran tee

- at

14 and Grandstaff was high for
Ravenswood with 13.

am

Monday Thru Sabrday-9 Til 2 A.M.

'.

scored 47 pointa to lead TalMo
to a 96-68 victory over Butler;
Mike Hauer's 15 pohts and Dan
Kelly's I4 helped st JOIIPb'l
College beat GeCJ1'19town H-45
and Jim LebuO'e scored 22 ~
to pace Cl:lhalic Unhersity to a
77-70 win over Kirp College fA
Pennsyl van1a.

•

dental
plan,
more
widow,
maternit)' and disability ber.
fits and a modified severance
plan.
The players also prevented
the owners from cutting out
their claim to a percentage of
the TV revenue. The issue was
bypassed aOO no attempt was
made to define the players'
right to it. The matter now
stallis the same way it did in
the old contract
Miller
clailns the players' right to a
percentage of the TV revenue is

.

.,

Purdue raised it5 record tot~
in the Big Ten Conference
wllh a 7t-.72 victory over
Michigan state whlle lndlar.
downed Wisconsin 101-84, Iowa
tq)ped Illinois 7&lt;f.53 and NOf'tb..
westecn defeated Ohio State 8&amp;I

NEW YORK (UPJ)- Basebell
moved out of the conterence
rooms and onto the playing
fields today but the game, the
p Jay e r s and commissioner
Bowie KWm may never be the
same
after the settlement
Tuesday of the pension fund
dispute.
The players called off their
boycott of spring training after
reaching a compromise threeyear setUemenl with lhe owners
that featured a $5.45 million
yearly
contribution
to the

THE DAILY SENTINEL

.,

.,..._t

v.
d
.C un

Dint and Dance al lht GREEN GABLES. Shorl
orders and sa~d,uit~u . .For rtcri~lion Billards. ·
Mort .women are plaYinR po9l allht Green Gablts

·-

lndudiJII
u,. _.....,.
Winners Win
bl.sket, for
whldl St. Jotln's ot New York looks liM it will w1a U. B1f T•
smashed lloty Croas 71-57 and title • • tho ~&lt; NC'.V
Notre O.me downed Valpl.ralao berth thot goeo w!jll It. Qlolo
3S.72 only hours after each State (ell three IUJ81 behlad
winner had been selected for a Purdue as Don Adapls Jcored %2
berth in the NCAft tournament. pointa ror Northllestam. lt WU
JOOn Warren Jed St. John's with the rourth loss in 1ix n-.t
22 poinl!'l and Austin Carr hid games ror Ohio state.
In other games, steve Mix
32 for Notre Dame.
night with Ylctorle1.

LaSalle, which lost its only

Laree Size Calif.

0\

Wloclarcyzk and Joe Marlonann,
who were key (llerath'll!s in the
victory, thus ~~&amp;eked It) their
bag.s and called it a college
career. They'll watch the NCA.A
touriW.ment
on
TV always
wondering If the)' couldn't have
led LaSalle to the dUe It they
had been given the chance.
In the meantime in college
basketball, tourney~ team•
beefed up their records Tuesday

lormer coach Jim Hard-

MARTH• CHArM•••

.. ,&lt;

Carollra in U. ftnala of the
Qaaker City 1-' eadval Tour·
'*1Dent, took a 42-34 talftime
leed agaiMt Weal Chester aliJ
then controlled the game the
rest of the way.
Senion Berllie WUliams, lArry
C&amp;IIJOII, Roland Taylor, stan

D
.
E
ds
~:::r
r enslon
lSpute n .'
::,:,,:;,,,,:;,:::,,,,,:,,,:: Baseballers Begin Training
NCAA for recruiting practices

rneJl

West

Atlanta • • ••• 42

Coache• rat.iDJII.
It could have boen Oliy the
becfmi,.: for Coach Tcm Gola's
plQers but it waa the erd.
UUr Ol'dirar)' circumstances,
they'd be looklr~ forward to
qualifying lor the NCAA tournament b)' winning the Middle
Atlantic Conf'erence post.-seuon
tournament. .. play1QK ia the na.
tloool oJ&gt;Otllght ol tho NCA
tournament •.• and, who knows?
.. perhaps going on to beat
Lew AlcirUor and nationallyfirst-ranked UCLA In the game
for the national chalqlioo•hlp.
Pack Their Bags
lnete.d, Gola's kids packed
their bags after the game ard
went home. They're not going to
any tournament because they're
01'1 a tw4&gt;year suapenslon by the

Falcons End on 9-9 Note

(;OIQI.')' ~........

SUPER ETHYL

By United Press International
East
W, L. Pet. GB
Baldmore . • 49 17 .742

A. basketball tournament for
bo~·s of third, fourth and fifth
grade ages is sdcduled March
7..S at the Syracuse Gradq, School
aOOitorium.
·
In the first game or !he fourteam tournament, the Syracuse
Raiders will take on the Racine
Royals at 7 p. m. Fr iday aOO.
the Syracu!'e Invaders will pl~·
the Letart Blaek Hawks at 8
p, m.
The consolation game, with the
two losers of the first evening's
action playing, is scheduled for
Saturday, March 81 at 7 p. m.
followed b}' the championship
game at 8 p. m.
Then~ will be a trophy for the
first and second place teams,
aU-touriW.ment team medals, and
awards for the most valuable
player, best foul shooter, best
dribbler aM longest shot.
4-6,
Referees wlll be Hilton Wolfe,
Games tonlght: Morehead at Jr. ard James Adams and CharD&amp;J.ton, Bowling Green at West· les Pyles will be timer. Admisern Michigan, Marshall at Kent sion will be 25 cents for adults
State, Adelbert at Denison, Ash- and 10 cents for students.
land at Central State, and
Refreshments of homemade
Wayne state at Youngstown candy, hotdogs. popcorn a lXI soft
State,
drinks will be available.

ttoc)[Jlle

' .;

B1 United Preas lnlero~Uonal
The MUOD that coukl have
ended ll'l giGI')I tor LaSIIlle
wound ~ TufiiKII,y night in Welt
Chester, PL
LaSalle's
basketball team
rolled over We~Jt Che1ter 91-73,
COO'.IIleting a 23-1 seaaon aOO
stretwtheni~ its rankl~ aa the
nation's fourth-ranked collea:e
team in the United Preas
International's
Board
of

••1

1.000 \ou or No. 3M Um~
..,_, \o be loMied from bin. or

Fresh Red Button

~

uvrr.

wbote lut llnoWD addi'Nt II l'oO Wll·
bur V•ll Cooner, Salem, Oldo, S.
h.,r•bY hoUfl•d th.al OD the Mtb dl.f
of: Feltnlai'J, llllt, 0.0.... KauU,
b~llJ pt.lntlfr rued
hit
,.ttuoa
.,..... ...,. u
def•llllbnt Ia u..

(1, • :

REGULAR GAS,

s~-

lZoz.

James 11nnounced plans Tuesday ror llhe runort 1o take place
at Bowling Green March 4, if
needed. The contest would be
necessary if Ohio U. wins at
Bowll._ . Green' and Miami lost
to Toledo S.tu'rday, The MAC
winner will represent the league
in the first round ot the NCAA
playoHs at Carbondale, nt,
March 8.
uwe won't krmr it a p)ayoff
game wUI be needed wttil Satur~
day night, but we obviously can't
watt until then to make arrar@ements for a Tuesday night game,"
Junes said. He said Bowlirw
Green pirked as the "mosucces.-

slblonel(tral MAC sit."
The loit MAC basketball UUe
game was played ln 1965 when

29~

POTATOES
MAINE

CORN

37e 6 !~9·.~· s1

16 count
pkg.

,

Pink Deter.genl

ICE CREAM
Seal test
DRUMSTICKS

American Conference basketball
title comes to a showdown Jle..
tween Ohio University and Miami,
league commissioner Bob James

·c

SCOT LAD

MAC lleady
COLUMBUS (UPO - lrthe Mid-

'·

$ 00

Carroll~

Just In Case

QUEEN OF I:OT
11 OUNCE JAR

EAT

At Dayton
Beaver Creek 61 West
lon 45

All-Stan@

id~

Hal Greer soored 32

field So. SO

For Playoff

75j.
8
Coffee Crea.mer
49,
16oz.

,.

12 oz.
CAN

99~

RC COLA

DOZ.39J.

Unci assified

FOR

Richmond 65 Madeira 51
At Canton
Marlingt:on 74 Tuslaw 28
Jack10n 53 Canton South 37

t
k
i

NO «ETURM BOTTLES '

~--sw.

-s•
New

I

.-· ..

,

nipped Se&amp;Ule 1H - 111 in over-

Tournament Scores

coo

...,

The Dallj Senlirael, Middleport - Pomeroy, 0., i·w. 26, 1969

3 -

Saturday Only!

-~-

80TH
FE DUAl
AND
STATI

rim

�,.. -. ~ ... ., _ ....... ~ . ,. --.. .-- ....

IIi--~··· ·· ~ . ··- -- --~

not re&lt;Jdre the government to turn Ito
bock m rollgloa, to tile DOlnt
The Constitution does

and relqloua beliefs bave no place In the Uvea

where prl,)l'er

and ceremonies of public

or

Tho

the

u. s.

RauN ~ Representatives recentb'

oponod a legislative day with
... rollowlng wonls: .. .... ...,
It be our aim, as we meet daily

.1rt. this bla:toric chamber, to meet
lbo MOds

or

struggling human- , to strengthen tile ties Utat
bind free men together, and to
ftnd the wa.y to peace among nation&amp; d. the world .•.. "
Prayer is a traditiooa.l par1:
fill both Houses ol Congress, just
u it Ia a part of American heri-

tqo.
1be Firat Amendment to t h e
COasdtuUon ~s, "'Congreas
Jbal1 make oo law respecting an

This phrase was designed not to
discourage religion, but to assure the ecJUll freedom of worship to all .

Unfortunately, manY people
have taken this phrase to mean
that God has no place in o u r
Goveroment.

While the Constibltion do e s
prohibit the establishment of any
rellglon by Government, It in no
way precludes those ln Government from expressing their personal religious beliefs and exer cising religioos rights.

om-

ll'y.

Through the yeara cur leaders in Congreas ~ In the White
nouse have pra,yed In the man..
ner ol tllelr choice tor Inspira-

The poat ,.,. - · In W&amp;lh·
lngton bove lmluihl a rotrolhlne InJection or oplrltuall\Y and
perspective

into

111

America

tion and guldonce In earrylno wtdch has auttered trom chron-out their responaibilitlea.
ic •hock. crises and tragedy
Prayer was offered at the eoo- for more than a decade.
vention in Ftdladelphia whtchproThe &lt;WJrtry to In need of spirck.lced our Constitution. Prayer Is Itual tllerapy. The .-wa1 of
dfered as each House of Con- worship and prayer In the rougress opens its dally session. tine ol ~.VVernment Ia most ~
couraglng.
Wlth all f1 the turmoU in our
country todoy lt woold he well
to look to the words or oor
First President: uWhbe,)J.stgovernment protects all in their
religious rights, true religion
affords to government its sur~
est support."

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - Madi!IOO. Square
~·s due for a high level
~ .... Multi-millionaire AI
Srels:ln can afford it but is
powertully mad at his Madison
Ave. landlord who boosted his
'llmee rent 130 per cent startlag In June ... . C. Deneuve gets
lllaer billing than A. Gardner
ID "Ma,yerling" but Ava got the
bigger dressing room •••• Ursula
Undress did the nelddd l,llt in
..,Soutbem Star" but refused to
let Columbia Pix peddle t h e
JDitos to Playboy ..•. Baby Huey
at the Cheetah weigfls a babylab too lbs.
The Hawaii Ka1 will keep featuring rock-croups but they'll
have to be clean and neat with
ao long balr .. .• That arts down

or

job

selectloo aboot 90

Ill' cent .... Caesar's Palace in
·Vopa al&amp;Ded the gifted George
Kirby to a ._.,ear pact .....

1be USO'a highest honor goes
tis year to Harv~ S. Firestooe

Jr., who has given a great deal
., time and ...h to generate

tl. rld.lflet-talnmenta

rr'Jbe ·NeYele,

all over the

a Catskills' fa-

'fOI"lte

of newlyweds, can't fi~
this one out: their champ

pre
IGaeYmoon te81Jlar is a

gal who

jlot arr!Yed with her 4th husiond - and ber preYious three
ianeymoon.s also were a p e n t

.......
: Nlclo'

IWton's estate will be

l,ow

MONOGAMY IS BE8I' POLICY I baqyalt hor eblldren on I h e
nlghio he II wllll hor, and lho
Dear HelOD:
I have been married 15yeara COUld bab;ralt miDe when we want
to a man wllo Ia a 800CI provid- to 10 out to&amp;Oiher. Very coo.v.
lie told me he oould aooak a.
er atld a doubi.Y sood lover. We
reall.)' love eaeh olhar and we round and I miPt never lotow,
can 1110 talk out our problems. but bo prelero hono&amp;V, and he
But m thlo problem, I DtiSI &lt;01· would never deeelYe either ol
fess, I can't se8. 'his point ot us. He SQS tbe oCber woman
view.
loves him 10 much she will go
You see, be aa,ys his heart is along, knowing he wlU ~er
leave me.
bl&amp; ......,. lor two, and he Well, I aald I
accoJll
to han an affair wttb a divorced lrleed of mine. He 1071 IIIIo tills. Hlo ......,r Ia lbal If I
ahouhkt't tau-t our marriage a make him g(n up his ""secmd
bit, as he will love us equally. wile" he'll take to drlak and

&lt;Oil,

In fact, he even HUggestecl that

probabl.)' Ieee hla Job,

Extra Plaid Stamps

along
Broadway

In tr11St lor his (and wile
'frlsb MeCiintoek's) two soos
4•· Trisi:J ta rich herself !rom
ell lnlerollt&amp; .... Lealie Ugpm•
brcalgbt 24 muslclans with her
U&gt; the Cq)aeabana whleh usually
filatures a dol:en or less: and
lite &amp;tap ....rat without any aceompaniment at alJ.
. IIIQ'mootd ~and who .......
~Irma la Douce11 and biJ wtre
eot.tt. Renard who starred In
It 10 many 881.801111 a~ in Par11, I,oodoa and ott Bclwy •• juot
...._. their marriage in a V er~
.......... Greta Garbo
Cll'dered ,.Lea ~..Ues de Broc:blt l&gt;ieJpoiae" at Clos Norand llleiS what oho 8&lt;11 plllt.o llttll. ibe -.Jd Olll;r eat
Olldbowoll
V /J&amp;kJD OllrDer8 Guido a o d
Jaa P• report Mia FU'I"CJW 11P1*e

e

WITH PURCHASE OF $20.00.
lbcepl a-. P'ohib~od by low)

Coupon Y•li~ Thru M•reh ht. In
• : I
AI Columbut Div. A &amp; P StONS
One coupon Meemecl witt. udl $20 pwchast

•

we care---------.

Which Of Our
4700Stores
Get The Best Beef?
Believe it or not, there are some people who think
the quality of our beA!f varies from store-to-store.
Every one of our Meat Departmentsoll'ers the aame high-quality beet,
the only quality we sell ..."S UPER-RIGHT" Quality.
Our quality specifications for "SUPER-RIGHT" Beet
are so high that some beef graded "Choice"
just isn't good enough to be labeled "SUPER-RIGHT."
TbiB one "high quality" policy for all stores applies to all the meats we aell.
It is true, that where customer demand c:alla for it,
you wm find thicker steaks, double lamb chops, ete.,
but they are all cut from the aame quality meat
that is available in !J!!!1I A&amp;P Meat Department.
After all, to satisfy customer demand is just plain good buaineaa.

·~49&lt;:

•

lb.

7Jc

,........ ...... ......
...ec

lb.&amp;tc

c

tb • •
I

...

I

ec

I

Y.

promlfte

or

her "Baby

"!'1

~Ui­

~ lnt'l Airport (ll'hore

. . Sour Cream Alpa' resorb a. . _ - Cmcord, Groasingera,
hold• Ill gala openltlc Jone

•1•

SWIFTS PREMIUt.l-fOR OVEN ROASTIN&amp;

Comed Beef • • • • •

SIZE
88's

--·

·HII!or'•

·-

1:'1""""""

still tn.
alive and UYlng In

adamant

llllll.pants-ault

~ of all N. Y. smart
.,..., Geae Cavallero Jr. Of The

~ ReJtaurant, even hu postlid orer his reeeption desk an
llllllrt - • tlljlplng that Claudia' cardiDile, filmiq In Moscq., waa turned away from the
bulan version OC a fashion. _ n.aauran: beeauH abe was

WU1tli ponla.

I

I ......

•

.

A&amp;-P'S FRESH PRODUCE/

.......

FLORIDA LAR6E WHITE

o..aages

du&amp;sc

.'

6~or49c

.l

' ;'

~ Mro. ~as Campbell, Do.v·
toni Mri. Gerald Moore and

daughters, Marietta; Mrs. Bess

lnspeetion

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

CIEA"' STYU

FAIILY FLOUR s:.Dc
With tlti, Coupon o~nd • $5.00
or rnor .. purchttt. I per cuitomer

Yald thnt Marcft lat. In
oil Columbn Dlv. Ald"a.

Jane Par"er Values!
JANE PARKER ENRICHED

Whbe

a..ead

22-oL$100
4

JANE PARKER

DaleII Apple Pie • ... 49c
JI.NE PARKER-SAVE IOc
0

=•t

0

I

:! 59c

.
c......... lpl-ala •

l'ntzen c..eaaa Com • • • • • 3""*1 ho•ea
FBOZD MIZBD VBGITA.BLBI Un IMdlel'l

Speeiol Low Pricei-Sove 16c

Eicht O'Clock Coffee

3.::.$159

IONA IRAND-CREAM SffiE

Gol••n Corn ••
AUNT NELLIE'S IREAKFAST
Orance Drink • • • • •
SPECIAL IJ:JW PRICE
Vee-All ..:.x:.s • • •
I

0

Red Cross Cotton lalls
Dial Spray Deodoro11t
Dial Roll-On Deodora11t
Parkay Soft Margarine
Carnation Slender • •
SNnshine Chu1-lts
•
Nabisco Fig Newtons •

PA~I-OVR

•

•

Co-Chairmen
Are Announced
Mrs. JIQ' Warner and Mrs.
Roy Reuter were named co chairmen (or the Easter sunrise serVice breakfast to be served by the Lydia Circle of the
Pomeroy U n it e d Methodist
Church . Meeting Monday night at
the church,. the circle voted to
purchase two candlclightcrs for
the church.
Mrs. Everett Thomas, a guest,
presented the program entitled
.. Heritage and Innovations of
Worship." Refreshments were
served by Mrs. G.t,y Guinther and
Mrs. Ted Downie. Others attending were Mrs. Arthur Hoyt. Mrs.
George Wright, Mrs. Glen Hiles.
and Mrs. Rlchar·d Rupe.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY WOMEN'S Chrisdan Temperance Union, 2 p,m,

Pomeroy

United

An lnipectlon on March 22
wao platmed Monday 011shl by
Bethel 62, International Order o(

day night at t!Je hall.

Is Planned
Job'• Daughters.
Chrllllne Jenkins or Grove
Cl\Y, the grand guardian, will bo
the lnllJOctlng olllcor. A practlcal'or lnopoetlm wa&amp;~eheduled
ror the Marc~ 10 meetlna or the
Betbel. Two peUtlma lor mom.
berohlp wore pre&amp;ented and It
waa doclded to lnltlale tile girls
ollhe time of lnapocUm.
lt na noted that tbere a r e
several
recordlnp entitled,
"Tht Ohio Job'sDauJhters Sing"

wer•

I

or

tile !lethe!.

Are Exchanged
Valentioea

were

exchanged

whMI the Latin Club of Ealtern
lllcb Scbool met ollhe home or
Jeut Whitehead! February 11,
with M member• ud their adrieor, ' ~·• : N~e Parker, ln
IUendlace.·:ne prelldent, Tom
Karr, wa1 lD char&amp;e ol the buslno11 meet1n11. Abelaacoor•J7J..
7t wae I'OJIOJ1ed In tile ll'ea11117
IQ- lltlr'IU' Larldna.
The valeat!De uMCI Y8tltll In
t.tbt, !IIIII hod mad!o IQ- lllo
GilDea ._... eont:llct.
ed IQ- Illlible Wood. Mro. WhileID honor "' her tktp~ ,

JIItmbli:•.
...a,

-

..

.

...

~··

Wll.DWOOD GARDEN C I ~J&gt;. .
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at the home
of Mrs. Homer Holter.Mra.Dayton Ashworth will be the assisting hostess.
POMEROY -MIDDLEPORTLl·
ons Club, regular meetine. Pomeroy United Methodist Church,
Wednesday at noon.
LEND-A-HAND Circle of Harrisonville, 8 p.m. Wednesday at
the home or Mrs. Robert Alkire.
THURSDAY
SPECIAL MEETING. Southern
Board or Education, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday, at high school.
SH.JUNE CLUB dance session,
7:30 p.m. ThursdQ, in Masonic Temple basement, Middleport.
REVIVAL AT Plants MemorIal Chureh beglnnlrw 7:30 p.m.
'fhursda)', Rev. Roscoe Thorne,
evangelist; Rev. Edward Grlf·
filh, pastor. lnritea ptj)ltc.
XI GAMMA M\J Olaloter, Boll
Sigma Phi Sorority, 8 p, m.,
ThurlldQ, social room or c &amp;.

Route 3.

Thursda.y night, American Legion
Hall in Mlddleport. Planned potluck Cor scouts and their ramilies; Tom Cas sell, speaker; Rev.
Wendell Stutler has entertain-

FRIDAY
SPECIAL MEETING, Middleport Lodge 363, F. and AM., annual inspeetior.; ~ter Mason
Degree exempnWoo. ·All Master
Masons invHed. Hefreshments.
TEEN DANCE, Friday, Racine
Junior High School under sporr
sorship of Southern sophomore
class. Music by .. Next In Line,"
8 to midrtight.
REVIVAL AT Christian Union
Church,
Hartford, Thursda)o
through March 2, at 7:30 each
evening with Rev. G, C. Johnson,
Columbus, speaking. Rev. John
Coppock, host pastor, invites the
HIGH SCHOOL DANCE party
friday, 8 to 11 p. m. at Wahama
alldltorium. Jays wUl emcee.~
en to public. Admission SOc per
person.

SATURDAY
SATURDAY NIGHTIIlghSchool
Dance Party at Meigs High School
auditorium in Middleport; daooii\il: rrom· 8 to 11 p.m. The Jays
will emcee. Admission, 75c.

.

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

.... .----

10th 81, thdoy
Is Celebrated
Red, White and blue streamers and balloons carried oot a
patriotic theme for a party hon·
orlng Faith Perrin, daughter ot.
the Rev. and Mrs. Bill Perrin,
on tter 1othbirthdayamlversary.
The party was held ln the downstairs social room (( the Trinity United Church of Christ Saturday. Games were played with
prizes being won by Becky Thomas, Jackie King, Beth McKnight,
Jemlfer Moh.ler, Crystal Hall,
and Patty Warner.
Mrs. Perrin. assisted by Miss
Peggy Story, served cake, ice
cream and cherry punch. Favors
were miniature flags and red,
white and blue tops. Candy treats
were also given to the children.
Attending besides those nam ~
ed were Carol Barnitz, Mary
Helen Blaettnar, Mary &amp;leDurst,
Paula Eichinger, Rebecca Hiles,
Mary Ann Hoffman, Chery I Kenne&lt;lY. Debbie Ohlinger, rae Rei bel, Trudy Roach, KimSebo, Pam
and Pat Vaughan, Jane Am Wam sley, a11d Beth Perrin.

Stewart!; Announce
Birth February 20
NEW HAVEN ~ Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Stewart, New Haven, are
announcing the birU1 of a son on
Februar~ 20, at the Pleasant
Valley rrospital, weighing 8
pound s, IS ounces, named Troy
Malthew.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mr s.
Harold Rumgarner, Letart; Mr.
and Mn., Otis Stewart, Hartford; gn•at-grandmothers, Mrs.
Genevieve Lewis, West Columbia arKI Ml"S, Lilly l::dwards,
Hartford; paternal great-grand·
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Willi.am
Stewart, Groveport, Ohio.

OfJlcers for the 1969-70 year
Mr. and Mrs. WOllam King
in Portsmouth Saturda,y
nighl for the grand inspection
f1 the Eastern Star Chapter there.
Last week the Wllliama Kings
and Mr . and Mrs. Robert King
attended a grand Inspection at

were

Beverly. Mrs. Fred Seyt'ang of
Toledo and Mr11. Carl Bierbaum
~ Brookvtlle came tor the inspection and were overnilht
KUests of the William Kings.
Mrs. Joe Ilaal and chUdren,
Millie and Jeff, of New Richmond were weekend guests r1
her mother, Mrs. Leota Hawley, and Miss Mildred Hawley.
They were joined here on Saturday evening by Charles llaaf,
student at Ohio University.
Mrs. Robert AllensworttJ and
Mrs. Grace I lawley were weekend
visiiOrs in Walbridge with Mr.
and Mrs, James Hawley. E.nroute
home Sunday they visited in Gallon with Mr. and Mrs. John AIlensworth.
Mrs. Edward Crooks, Pam and
Cindy, and Mrs. Walter Crooks
spent Friday in Columbus. They
were joined ror the da,y by Mrs .
Mae Sauer.
Mr. and Mrs . ll. W. Welker
and daughters or Cohlmbus were
weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Sauer.

Attend Funeral
From Out-of. Town
Funeral sen ices for Homer E.
Cook were conducled Mon:tay at
the Rawlings - Coats Funeral
Hotne by the Rev. Max Donahue.
Interment wa s in the Hiver view
Cemetery.
Relatives
from oul~f~town
here for the services were Mrs.
Arthur Stuart and Mr. and Mr s.
Charles Pelzell and family, Charleston, W. \'a. ; llermanandllomer Hoffman or Chicago, Ul., and
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Coble,
Da)1on.

ol the Heath United Methodist
Church have been elected.
On the administrative board

are Mrs. Forrest Bachtel, I~
leader; Eric Chambers, superintendent ol the study program,
with Jack Bechtle and James
Brewington, assistants; M r ' ·
Bernard Fultz (children), Mr. and
Mrs. Jaek Slavin (youth), Lee McComas (ackllt) and Jack BechUe,
family coordinators.
Elected work area chairmen
were Mrs. James Euler. eWcation; Mrs. Nan Moore, evange.
lism; Mrs. James Criswell, missions; Mrs. Wayne Gibbons, social concerns; Mrs. Everette Davis , stewardship; Mrs. Charles
Brac:R&gt;ury, Mrs. Bachtel, worship, and Lee Tyo, ecumenical
affairs.
others on the administrative
board are Mrs. Moore, Women's Society of Christian Service, president; Mrs. Euler, lay
member to conference, with Mlss
NeJIIe Zerkle and Mrs. E.. 0.
Rail, alternates; Mrs. Fultz,
chairman of the council on ministeries; Eddie BJake Sr., pastor ..parish reladons; Miss Zerkle, treasurer; Mrs. John Zerkle, financial secretary; Miss
Frieda Faehnle, membership
secretary; Newman Burdette, di rector of music; James Euler,
district stewart, and M r s.
Moore, representative to t h e
Methodist Union.
Electf!!d members at large to
the board were Dr. Jerry Matheney and Mrs. Newman Burdette, representing yoong adults
of the church, and Miss Mary
Bradbury and Miss Twila Clatworth.y, the youth.
Mr. and Mrs. James Clatworth,y, Miss Bess Sanborn, Bernard Fultz, Charles Byer, Robert
flyer, Mrs. Slavin, and Mrs.
James Brewington were named
to the health and welfare committee, Honorary membersofthe
administrative board are Mrs,
Noah Haskins, Robert Harris,

Miss Vesta McCoy, a.nd Mrs.
Mattie Rush.
Bechtle was nauned chairman
d the tnlstees' board, James
Clatworth,y , the church business
manager, Miss f'aeMie the recording secretary and M r a.
Fultz, Chambers, and Jim Tyo,
memberti on lhe council oo ministries.
EJected to theboardoftrustees
were Donald Stivers, JoM Zerkle, Richard Lhambers, James
Criswell, Bechtle, Clatworthy,
Brewington, Charles Bradbury,
and Charles Byer.
Names to serve on Blake'lpastor'i)arish relatioos committee
were Fultz, Mrs. Clatworth.y,
Mrs. L. W. McComas, Miss Carol Bactttel, and Mrs. Euler. Mrs.
Arthur Strauss is the communIon steward.
COWJclls eleeted include ~
Children, Mrs. Moore, WSCSrepresentative; Sandy Johnson, youth
representative, and Mrs. J o h n
Krawsczyn, Mrs. Ernie Fraser,
Mrs. C. E. Yotmg, Mrs. J a c k
Bechtle, and Mrs. Galen Brown.
Youth, Mrs. Brown, Miss Jennifer Goble, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Slavin, Mrs. Max Donahue and
Brewington.
Adult, Mrs . :Marion French,
Mrs. David Krawsczyn, M r s.
Clara HeiUiesy, f!oolrs. Malcolm
Roller , Mrs. 0, P. Klein, and
Mr. and Mrs. John Compton,

Mr•.

Family,
ca... ··~
Eddie B&lt;oont, llrL ~ lllene)o, Mr. and Mro. !Jte•o
Houehlno. Mr. and Mra. Lot Tyo.
Commialion

~

Brown.

·

Evangelism, Mill Faeml..
MillS Mary Loo Teafont, MrL .
Bachtel, Mrs.. Emer1011 Joftet,·
Mrs. Earl Knlllht, Mro. McComas, and Mr. and. Mrs.. YCIUDI. '
Missions, Mr11. E. M. Wood.
Mrs. Jane Gilkey, lira. Boutttll '
Hayes, Mrs. Roger Morpa. Mn.
Earl Davenport and Mba Bela
Sanborn.
Social Coocema, Mn. Ter~
esa Byer, Mrs, Mildred Zetaler, Mrs. AJma Ylller, Wvne
Glbboos. and Mr. and MrL Emer8Qrl Jones.
::t.ewardship, Wa.yne G1bbon1,

Mrs. James Jividen, Clatworthy, Euler, McComaa, and Charles A. BraciMJry,

Worship, Newman BurdeUe,
Mrs. Klein. Ben Phllscm. Mrs.
Hennesy, Mrs. Perry Mlteb,. and
Mrs. M. C. WU1011..
Ecumenical Af(alra, E a r I
Knight.
l.ay speakers (or tbe cturch
are Eric Chambers, Mrs. Bacbtel, and Forrest D. Bachtel. Mr1.
Bachtel was also named to be
agent for the church mqazlne.

Our Trade-In Sale
ENDS SAT., MAR. I
Your Old Shoes Are Worth Dollars!

$2.00 IF YOU WEAR 'EM IN
$1.00 if YOU CARRY 'EM IN
Towards the purchase of any pair of shoes,
priced 6.99 or more. All trade-in shoes liven
to charity.

ChapmanrCanaclay
Next Door to Elberfelds

Pomeroy

MANUFACTURER OF LIVING ROOM SUITES AT A GREAT DISCOUNT. All STYLES. MODERNTRADITIONAL - EARlY AMERICAN - FRENCH PROVINCIAL. GOOD SELECTION OF FABRICS.
PRICEfl SO lOW YOU'll BE II RAGGING ABOUT YOUR PURCHASE FOR YEARS.

IN CANTON FOR WEEKF.ND
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Pullins

and family spent the weekend With
Mrs. Pullins• sister, Mr. and
Mrs. Albert SqiJth of Canton.
Taking the trip with Mr. and Mrs.
Pullins were Mr. and Mr&amp;. Elber
Riebel who visited with their son,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Riebel and
family of Louisville, Ohio. Returning home with Mr. and Mrs.
Pullins (or a visit was Garrett
Worthen, of Canton.
GUESTS OF BURNSIDES
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Burnside were Mr. and
Mrs. Earl 0. Thoma, K~ly and
Suzan of Pomeroyi Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Hager, Rhorkla and Debraj
Mr. and Mrs. Glen .Thoma, GaU
and Linda, and Brenda Flowers.
all of Bashan; Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Houdashelt of Reynoldsburg, and Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Burnside and Teressa, of Chilli-

cothe.

-::··.

THE
NOW
SALE

$241
67
5104
5

$99

2 PC.
SUITES

NOW I

s241

WITH US

Thursday 7:30 p.m.; Mrs. Poul

BEFORE YOU BUY
. • FRAMING LUMBER
•SHEATHING LUMBER
• P~OODS - ALL KINDS .
• PANELING - SEVERAL DESIGNS
• PAINT - N~l SP~ING LINE
. • PLASTER 80ARO :ANi:J ROOFING
• FULL LINE PRE•FINISHED MOULDING

·.

.-

,· ..

. ...

FrH

EASY

Delivery

I ElMS

&lt;,

'

~ At

......~
· ;;

la-

clude, edu~. Erie~ ..
Mrs. Bechtle, Mr. and lin. Me·
Comas, Mrs. Lambert,. M r L

BAKER FURNITURE BOUGHT OUT COMPLETE SHOWROOM AND WAREHOUSE STOCK OF A FINE

5)4

.

;:· c.~•

Ohio Northern Untveraity, Adl,
and steve Clark ot Marietta.

PLAN YOUR

,. i;/'

•

~ ~

Heath Officers are Named

or the brldeflroom hoot-

ed a bachelor part,y Frldoy nlllht
lollowlni: the rehearfO}. Among
those at the e'YCI\t held at a traternU;y house in Athena were
Litsch, a .student at Ohio Unh'eroley, Wendell, Gilbert, Robert
Wilhelm m, Priestly. Jlm Willey, Lacey, and !lui Ray of Marshall UnlversU;y; BIU Moore of

....

WOMEN'S Aasoelatton, Flr1t
United Preeb)'teriln Church,

llaptottslall, devotl-' t¥r,
Mrs. Edwud Burkett, MI.. Phyl·
lis Joacttlm, Mra. Helen White,
Mrs. Emil Ball, and Mro. Warreo Davll 1· hOsteaieL
EPISCOPAl. Church Wcorion'o
Lomcl1ocla, t2:3o;.lclllowediQ-pro.

brothers

public.

SOE.

......., dOWilooo ·Mn. J 11. n
··-··
'
... .
, _ . · Hartlt1pr; book review, Mra.

- 'ID -~Vllh-~
iind.all!&gt;'
laio
..,

Mrs, Edna Stiles or Pomeroy,
Route 3, recent surgical patient
at Veterans Memorial Hospital
.
'
1s rec~erating at the home of
her granddaughter, Mrs. Barbara Fry, also of Pomeroy,

ment.

aidA
. ., l\l1tl poltiC~ lllo Thoretljl Jdlnoptj; '""'~ eotn•
~"":-..IQ-.Sot)olr~lllland . mtlllo, Mra.:~SiorJ; lllrti. ..\
. ' ,..,. - ~ Wpl "" ..... R. Klt!lbl, . Mro. D!liO DuiiGa, .

FINEST 9UAUTY

SKCIALI-·STOQK·UP

a~saoe

• 3ioi4(1.
.

merman, Surlngtleld, and Larry
&amp;nllhers, Clyde.

Methodist Church; amual Frances Wblard tea. Each member
to bring a guest. Mrs. T. T.
Slelton 1'f'il1 g(ve the program.
FEENEY -BENNITT ~st 128,
American Legion, 7:30 Wednes-

:•

En
Nct.O•I•,
•
a.=.
'
1
"
ANN
El•ow Macaroni • • • • i~5t
loeMilklan •••••
I

'

Mr. and Mrs. Joe Painter, Millstone, W. Va., Miss Ruth Zim-

,..... blrtltdol•....,ed.ril'fooh..
~
·
..

a

ANN PA&amp;E- TOP QUALITY

Loaves

Polalo Cklps

!•.

WHOUUINIL

SUIIIIYflfLII

t=••

Moore, GlenvUie; ·Mr. and Mrs.
Gordon D. McKee and children,
Corton, W. Va.; Mrs . Jotm Kuhl
and children, Glenville, W.Va.;

Wednesday,

Latin Verses

t:t*l
Nlblels Com
S '!:: 51
Golden ,.
. s::•1 Peaswii.Onloas •••
"OI'D
.... .
While Com :.= • • • • .4'!:: 51 lllcedGI'eea
• • S ......
MexIcom eo... • ••• t
Aspal'agulpean • • '!:Sttl '
r ..ozen Nll•lets Com~ ••• t-sa ho••• Ckeea ••••• .J::.• •• ~~··
WHOlE KUNEL 01

girlllh erie• or "Calfee
~.' Borscht'?''
'

•

= ·=: ''"

8111111 ..... =.
Smlbtl . . . Jowl•
llltul ...... ....:....

Several reiatlve&amp; and friends
here for the Saturday wedding ol
Mias Lil'lda Moore to
Jerry
Arnold wi:re guests at thi! home
~ the bride's parents, Mr. and
Mre. Russell Moore, Pomeroy.
Ovel'lllll&gt;t auesll Friday ollhe
Moores were their son and daughter..tn-law, Mr. and Mra. Ru.saell William Moore, Jr ., Ada;
Miaa 9.Jsie Kauffman, Columbus;
Miss Diana Ex, Monroe; Miss
:!llaron Slnlth, HemloCk Grove,
and Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Gaul
aDd aon, Michael, ~~Giests on Soturil~ were Mr.

which
eut several weeka
aao lD Dela-o. SoYoral girls
rrom tile local Belltel aone w1111
the choru1.' The recordlnga are
avallable
Paul n.mell, •••

d to

~c!'IPfured

~

... •

s•..

CALIFORNIA JUMBO

Navel

I

I

;

I'IIBSR SAVBIIKRAVT Z ~Zfc
on

I

Moores Overnight Hosts

PellnS.•p .•
~
StE"'I· HAl
WDT , ...IliA ....
IONILHS
•
lUND
lit._..
I

Mra. Lorena Amol.d entertain·
ed FridaJ' night at Balley'a Reltaurant with a climrr party preceding the rehearaal for the Saturda..v weddins o( her son, Jerry, to Mlsa Linda Moore.
Qlestl at the dlmer were Mr •
and Mrs. Rusaell Moore, Miss
hron Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Dooald ~er, the Rev. and Mrs.
Glen Hiles, Mr. and Mrs. Allan
Harris, all of Pomeroy; Mr11.
Richard Well, Middleport; Miss
Debra Senith, Rutland; Mr. and
Mr11. Rodney Gaul and Michael,
Belpre; Mills &amp;t&amp;ie Kautrman, Columbus; Miss Diana Ex and Danny Litsch, Mmroe; Mr. andMra.
Russell WUilam Moore, Jr., Ada,
and Steve Priestly, Charles Wendell, Jim Gilbert, and Tom Lacey, all or Marahall University,
Huntington.
Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity

RECUPEHATING

Mr:

. ::

.

BIG BUYS

MISS HELEN LOOIARY, who has called Columbus home ror
many, many years, plana to return to Pomeroy. She'll be taking an
apartment in town, e'IPecting to make the move sometime i.n March.

JOHN . . . . . . . . -

1.., 59~

Skinless Wleael's • ,..

LITTLE EIGHT MONTH OLD STEVEN MICHAEL K~1GHT, soo
or Mr. and Mrs. Terry Knight of Caledonia, wu christened Sund~·
at thtl Wesley Methodist Church in Marion. Paternal grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Knight, went up for the christening of their
only grandchlld.

CAnt ....... .

lit.

= ... .

*·)

;JMkie Ona11f.1 NCJ~estec:l tickfill/ .-,. hereelt 8nd children to
~~· Soound lime .... Have
a ~ rumor: lllo Iqaell 1!1'1JUP

eve~ srosbeaks rrom the north. In tact, look lC) mo ~: any cold
morni,_ and you'll catch a ~se of Nan Moore, field glasses in
hand, hurrying toward Fisher St., which seems to be a favorite spot
tor tile grosbeak• although this bird almost never come this tar
IOirth.
The ,home or Mr. and Mrs. Everett Davis apparently has some
special attr•ction for the black, white and gold beauties. As mam
•• 40 have been counted in the Oock by Mrs. Davis and as many as
17 have come onto the porch at one time to get their ration of sunflower seeds.

1

;

.~&amp;9&lt;:
I

RECENT VISITORS IN MIDDLEPORTwereMr.andMrs. Olarles
Hess and children, Gregory and Charlene, just back (rom three
yoara with the U. S. Army in Germany.
They were here, of course, with Helen Shuler, really an aunt,
but almost a mother &amp;o Charles whom she took as a youngster after
his father died. Olarles and his family were acconipanied to Middleport b)1' his mother-Ill-law, Mrs. Margaret Brown of Clementon, N.J.
They'ri now enroute to a new base in Wiools.
It ,,waa ••
u1e HeaJ family that Helen weR to see a co!.l11e of years
ago when she took a trip to Europe.

~ WATCHERS ARE HAVING a neld day since the inaux or

tEtfTEH:Sf.-CfOD VAl.PfSI':~ ·:'., .':~,~"·
Ocean ....c. rlllels
rloundel' rlllels ~=.
ltc
•
Bnaded Pol'llons ~= 1~. ltc
'
Ballbul Steaks • • • • • ·... 'It'
..
Bnaded
l•p ~= .1~.'1"

Young Tul'keys • • I~ 38~
SUPER-RI&amp;HT QUALITY

...

nicest ever.
In Monday's mail alone there were ~7 cards of congratulstion1
for the Middleport nonegenarian. f"rlends and relatives from all
around were there ror her big day.
Amorw those stdtlplna: by to say "happy birthday" were Mrs.
McNamee's three grandchildren, Virginia Betz of HUiiard and Maz:le
Hannahs of Pomeroy, daughters of Charles and Kathryn '"Sis"
Wise, and Charles Bradbury, son of C. P. and Ferne Bradbury.

.

that name clotes
on Sotbrda,y ,

lAin" IDO'Vle •••• The new

I

~--··

0"" "~

nowera, decorated cakes, gift.s, fruit and cards - whal a da}'

rrom

ltlek.
bualne
ss.

Ill'

lbcept ;tom. """';ba.d br lew)
Coupon V.tid lhru M•rdt Ist. In
AI Columbut Div. AI P 51...,
One coupon '*'"mecl witt. HCh $10 pwochese

I

• """"" • v •

'·&lt;

WITH PURCHASE OF $10.00.

Stt•l•c Clllcleu • • • »=
Frill! PoJt ROlli ':'.': to.»:
Bllei•PorkRelsl ~ • t.. &amp;fc
..,.

~ .,

Mra. Fannie McNunee had! Her 95th birthday was sureb one or the

alotanl pardlatt

..e ~a week-

get ll1olr bl&amp;ilell
Jeasel JJI.U escort IS ..year -ol.d
•let Linda Hayoen to t h e

)ldt plain
trooble, let Helen helP' YOU.

COP'YI'tJGHTet-THIQRIAT ATWffiC 6 PACIPIOTIACO..IIIO.

,...1

-

or

lng kid trwble

CHUCK

SUPER;lK;HT QUALITY

No matter where you live, if you want that thick steak, double lamb chop
or Ill)' cut you don't see In the case,juat ukforlt.
WE CARE about, and want to satisfy, every euatAnner...
IIDd we mean ar customer.

Ia dl&amp;tl 14ng a
'lilt 10 piJ-itwo!HorClrlMiltown'a Bo-Bo ....,_.._ ..•.
ol tbe ChinHt retUu.r-

- '- -dlerle·

-Coted to

This column lo

lamli.Y llYin&amp; oo U 1001'n baT·

BONELESS

Beef Ri• Steaks ":"
Encllllt Cut Read • '
hi• Steak .::..:.."":. •
Beef Slripa For Braiei•c
Beef Dirt Rl..

One o:lter thing we want you to know.

DoDI ~.

beartnc

Heart's" bluff. Make ltcleartblt
While 70U love him, JGU and lbo
children wcn't ·a re ' him witb
another women or a bottle. &amp;x...
teen compatible 700fl will do tile
rest. Here's ror 35 more ol the
same!- H.

CHUCK

I

It'Butruet

.... eo- ...... _,..

•

mother ol five •••• he'dJ1earetb
have time for booze then, would
he? And llllllo aa 70U II)' IU
In olhor wordo, call ''B Ill

SUPER-RIGHT 9UALITY

CENTER
BLADE CUT

uol&gt;

!IIIII bt'l

Extra Plaid Stamps

TENDER
JUICY
ROAST

0 .... .....

Wedding Party Entertained

.. great wltll ddlctr.n ho'd ....
abi.Y enJqy btlnl married to tile

SUPER-RIGHT 9UALITY

RO ST

•

an, JQI're -

BIG BUYS on "Super-Right" Meats!

hod~-- ... ~

1

- -&lt;U . .

- - - •.. " ' ' '

~~"•••&gt; .,..7 dl•"!:ee ......... bt

the uner: After

Better Than Double Stamps!

- t o - - .. . . ol lbelr ~ "-all, 11&gt;o

-

' - ' I will bo better &lt;llllllan
her, for U he turn&amp; into 1 bum,
rll IWI r.vo him, and If I
learn to &amp;hare ru have hlm.
Please understand that wenev·
or bove · bod tnd&gt;le with being
eom&amp;MLIIble- In ev0f7-· Wbol
my ll1lband wants is two women
to love equally - and he thinks
we lhould be friends, even to WJ-Ing out u a lamii.Y group, with
all seven of our combined ehll·
dren. - POLYGAMY OR LONELINESS?
P .S. h
has five dilldren,
we have two, and we're both
ver;y proud of them. My husbud 11 crazy about his kids,
but !lllf&amp; hers are spoiled.
Dear P or L:
Since you can talk out your
problems together, be maddenIngly reaiODible. Tell your hus-

bud AND 10UJ' Haublal. triend.,
lhat alter careful cGitdderolloa.
)'OU'Yo decided 11'1 _ . , .
or not111n1 and If lll.' tuml IIIIo
a dnlnken INm, well, louab, bobJ'
- ohe """ nNbUI- him, ool
~I Thea 01 1QU'te . . ..... ....

Clip and Redeem These Coupons

Voice

lilo

wont to share m,y huobowd, bUt
I don't ....t to live wllll a dnlnk·
en bum. He 11¥1 no matter what

IJ)I.rltual renewal fn our coun-

ciala.

President Nixoo1B inauguratlm
was ooe of the first times since
George W.llshington that a tullscale worship service was apart
o( the inauguration program, Prior to the swearing-tn ceremony
on the Capitol steps, about 750
persms attended a prayer service 1n the State Department Aud-

So U eomea tD Chla: I don't

ltorlum. Mr. Nlllllll boo alao lnltllled a a..toy worJIIlp 101'\'lceot
tile White llouae. The P r o - •
il!lft'ortt: are an eDillgle aU of us
... lollow lD brlnllnc •

·- .. .

... ··---···.

I

'

" ·,

�WANT AD
INFORMATION
OEADL.INU
S • ·• ·
lot•• PviJ,IIcetion
........ , U..lllliM t 0.111.

OF

CoOICollotiont I Co,ec:Uon•
occe,-.4 u"'ll 9 • ·• · f.,..

Will k

QUALITY

Doy el Pvl!Ucollo,.

n. , ... ,h ....

,. .......

lfGUL.A T IOHS

the rl.hl
.. Hit or roi\Ct ,,.,. ••• ._._. ob·
...,;.-1.
,ul!oll•'-• will not
. . ro•,.••lliolo for ,_,, than 01'11
IM.,rKt l,..ortion .

n.

RATES
For Wont lui Hrvico

J Clntl ,., WOfd 0"" lntl,.ion
Minim.,... Choot,. 15c:
12 c:omt Ill' wo•d throo co,.oc:.., .
thre lftlortlor~t.
11 com•,.. Word

....."'''"

•i• eon1011:utivo

25 per cont Oitii:Oiol"' Ofl poid adt
• ~ 111111 ,.lei within 10 cloyt .
CARD OF THANKS &amp; OBITUARY
11.50 f.- 50 word mir~in~u"' . Eo .
011141ti1MI word 2c .

&amp;LIMO ADS
A4illllt111M11 25c: ChGr,. por Advor -

327 engine, auto . trans ., P.S., P .B., white with blade
vinyl top, 17,000 actual miles, loco!
Real s.horp!

1965 CHEVROLET 4 DOOR ................................ $1295 ..

1962 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE ........................... $599
3 Seat Wagon , VB engine, automatic trans. Power
steering and brakes, good tires, radio and heater .

POMEROY, OHIO

Help Wanted

Cud Of Thanlcs
WORDS CANNOT adequately
express our deep appredaUon

ror

Olurcll be(lnnl"' Thuroda',
Peb. 27, 7:30 p.m. Evangelllt
Rev. Roscoe Tbome. Pastor
R... Edward Griffith.
l-1$-31&lt;
~

pi, lor bulh!lng ynor home.
IAmt! Ume loon available.
1-111-tfc
W1L'. DO !Iewing at home zippers.
pockets, pegging.
hemminf(. alterations. etc.
Ml'l. Freddie Thabet, Maoon .
Pbone 7i3-5R51 .

Rodillll, 1118 LegiOII Terrace.
,_16-121p

W•ntecl
ANTIQUES , furniture, dishes,
mllceDaneous. Mrs . Howonl
c..cll, 1011 W. Main St., Pomoft11.
1-11-tfc

can

1111-6517.

1-.

Auto Saln
t!Oinl to

Germany, Pttono .._

,__

- . Dovfd Bokor. Syraeaoe.

66 Buick ••.•.... $1795

AI. Jflndon on Drums

Niahtly Thru Saturday
March 1-9:30 T; I 2 AM

VACANCY lor two e14er1y poo.
pie. Prefer private paid ~
- -- u-. TIJ.$111.
10-1-tfe

'l'HERE wlH be a gun moot

_ , . bollnnlnl at

noon at
lhe Forked Run Sportsman
a.. E,..,..,. ill welcome.
Z.a-3tc

MtJSIC ....,. Friday and SatnnlaJ, Ja'a Qub '"' llarriSOII¥illt Rood, olf Rt. 7.
2-2S-ltc

~

L•Sob,. Cutlam 4 dr . Sedan. A
low mlleago, •upor~ condltl~n,
•"• •wntfi, ri.w Buo ck trado 1n.
PS , PB. like

n, .....

68
Pontiac ....•.. l7695
Fireblrd 2 dr . Hord Ta!'. ffi cu.
ln . VS •"'Jine . High output with
4 •P· •hih. Full op..,ating Con•
141l. Vwv nl~~:e .

Pontiac , . , ... $1395

Catolino 4 dr . Sodan. Ju1t ar·
rived. Mew Pontioc: trodo-in .
Low mlloal"' Hrdromatle. On•
very c:arefu

lOc o owner,

and life too o:an be
beautilul If you UIC Bhio Lilt-

C~RPETS

Ire. Rent eloctrle ahampooer
fl. Tiny's Bargalulml.
Z.ll-tlc

REPO&amp;\lESSI!lD Klrtly vacuum
cleaner in ....nent condttloo.
Has all cleaning attaclunenll
Including buller and clemotber. selill new for over $200.
Pay off I poymonll at fll.tG
montbly. Guaranl&lt;ed, Pb'"'e

I«)

-

1-25-«c:

BALl!'.'! IIOCOiid cuttlll( bay.

Pttone -~-

BUICK
PONTIAC
GMC TRUCKS
POMEROY

Forhnt

Z.Jl-ttc

MlXI!lD HAY, 3llc

1

bate, phone

·
1-D-I!e
REGISTERED Quar1er Hone
Colt. Pttone 992-51113. 1-~tp
HOUSE IN 'nippen Plains. l"'
.Kftl, 7-room house, bam and
block proge ... Route 7. Calf
Ooolvtlte 6111-371M.
~-~tp

not Included. Pttone 11112-33311.
:1-~

CHAIN SAWS

Sl 40-•SO
At low a• •.
POMEROY

llaoy lladol1

.

Sobna~~~« - · SEWING MACHINES, repair
no odor or sbeddlng. TeiiiJ&gt;orservice, all makes. WY z-

good

garage,

'1:-acre

ground. in Reedsvi11e, Junction 1:14 and 881. C. V. Buckley, l'llone ~to . 2-26-4tp

SIX ROOM house with bath,
Wright St. $7500. Phone 7125101.
2-26-«p

AKC MINIATURE pondle puppy : cOOc:olate mate, $1$. Little
lloeklng, Ollio. Phone tlll921112. Quallty bnotl. 2-:l$-ltc

MCORE'S

Wanted To Buy or Rent
one or two houses in Meigs
County, reasonable.

124 • . MAIN

POMIIOY

2316.

Real bt•te For Sale
O'BIUEN A CROW
REALTY 00.
POMEROY
EXCLIJSIVE
BUT PRICE!) RIGHT - 2"'
story frame, 17 rooms. 8 bed- ·

baths,

bardwond
base-

can~,

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

ment witll uUUty room, not
upenslve to beat, has eloctrlc elevator. A NICE HOME.
MIDDLEPORT - RESTAVJl.
ANT FOR SALE - In holsine• for years. nJce equipIMilt, a gond location. OWner

AUTOMOBILE lniiUI'IiiCe beol
eancelled7 Lost )'Otlr operator's Jleense? Call I9J-29lll
I II lie

Gonda......
ill ACREI - 15 of bottom land.
6 room house, bam, garage.
ntber boildfngs. Mineral!. 1st
time offered. Only $5.0110.110
TOBAOCO BASE 11'011 JU!NT
HEL1!N _. VIRC:IL TEAFORD

SYRACVSE

IIIN5-3tc

Roal-lo--'*"
Midtlleplrl,

~

ATI'ENTIO'f Melp land own. t' URNISHEU ana unturil181led
.... ail and ... ,..... WilD~
IIJI8i'Uil0iits. ~lose to ociiOoJ. 'l-INCH RCA TV with a swivel
Ill Ia llolp County. Write P.
stand. Phone 742-a:Hl. 2-26-m&lt;
!'hone IIIIJ.ii434,
111-ll-tle
LAMPS electrified, oonveral..,.,
o. JIOJ[ Ill, l'bmeroy, Ol!to.
lamp parts, cbimneys, shades,
:1--p 't'JIAILEJI LOTS. Bob's Malllle 19011 SCHVLT house trailer aot
on "' acre lot bock of Hart- wirtnc. Lee Rudlalll, 1118 I.eCourt, Syracuse, Ob1o on State
lord. Like new. Lived in very
glon Terrace.
:l-11-121p
I WilL not be l'ti(&gt;OIIolble for
Rl. 124, Phone - 1 .
any debb tviib ik.-tod by any1-ll.tfc little. For lJilonnaUon, write CURTISS CATn.E Breeding
..,.. !ban myself.
George Flelcls, 131111 E. ll3rd ·
l'!iooe Parker .._
'Guy Bini.
HABMONY aparlmorits 3
St., atJeaco. ID. 80111.
Serv!Poce.
·- - t Cool
Rl. I, Middleport
• 1• ·~- 2264 meroy or - · and ~ IVOIIIS, llimllbed, new
r v - ville eaD statloo.
:1-IWO!c
walla, floors, filriljlul:e. prt.
vale plllting. D!lt"6f aU floodl, MEN'S WORK uniforms and
SEPTIC tanks clOIIIIod. Miller
,JBLIC SALE Friday, F&lt;l&gt;. 211.
willie painten unffonns. Jrl·
3 blocks lrop1 P.,.,.toy pool
SanitaUon, Sle'Wart, Ohio,
Oeorp's Auction Roose, Rut·
fer's Clothing Store, Rt. 33,
ot!lce, ~ ·fimD 1.0 a.m.
lind. Now and •"" mercb- to 8 (pllll, ·
Phone :1-l:l-llc
Pomeroy.
2-21...,
:1-4-tfc
llidlle. Conllpments wei
C. C. BRADFORD
- . . . ()poll !rom 10 a.m. till
ROOM lurnllbed apart. UNCLAIMED LAYAWAY, 1111
AvcnONEER
oale Ume for """signments. 1!1eiJ!. Phone 11!12-38511. 2-11-tfc
lllCldel zig Z311 sewiDtl mad!·
C&lt;&gt;mplelo
8erVIee
lale darts at 7 p.m. I-Z'&gt;-3tp
ine In portable, , _ oo butMlllll
tona, buttonltoles, blind bems
'lll!REE-room fllllltsbed aport.
r.tiN SHOOT &amp;lnday at Rutland
llochle.
drelaes and fancy stltdiol
ment, I:K Mulben'y Avo.
ClriiiBradflri
- a n Leg!'"' Farm. From
without attachments. ComPttone 19Hft0.
:1-ll-tfc
I I tic
_ , till I p.m.
z-•:11&lt;
plete price f3t.86 ..- mU.
euy payments of •uo per
~ lR CONDmONING RelrlgerI llffi.L NOT be reronaible for
month. CaR 192-2t1.'16. l-:15-&amp;:
atlon servlee. Jack's RefrigFor Sale
any d&lt;l&gt;ts contract.d by anyeration, New Haven . boDe
POODLE PUPPIES. AKC To' TWO BEDROOM Liberty moone other than m)'IOII.
11112-ZIJ'
III.
4 • tfc
miniature, f75 and up. Stud
llll&gt;Od : Carron W. Jallnaon .
bile home, 10 • 55, wllb air
Rl 3, PO"fferoy, Ol!lo. 1-~
ae"lce and grooming. P._
coodltionlng. May be seen on READY • MIX coocr.to deHvIIIIJ.5141.
II 3 tie
Maln St. in Rutland or oonered rfgllt to your project
lact Leroy Denny or Phone
Fou"d
Fut and eaay. Free 1111Phone 8411-Dil
llt2-571111 for appointment.
POUND - lt!O Claaa Rinl with f'OTATOES,
maleii.
Phone lltl-3284, Goec·
Claronee ProU!tt, Portlml.
:1-:15-&amp;:
bdllall FOG '"' JOG, may
leln
Ready
• Mix Co , Middle.
11-ll-tlc
dalm at m Lopn Street '"'
port, Ohio.
I 10 tfc
SEVEN week-old plgB, flO. Am,._ etlfl.
~
SAVE IJ,\VE SAVE! Save your os TIHis, Pttone 74:1-51125.
BUDGET PRICE lumtture C11
IIIWI1. your time and your
HelpW•m.d
third floor budiet 1bop.
t.ck. We have 1 new trenchl.o\IORATORY TI!ICIINJCJAN.
Baker
Furniture. Middleport.
• to dig your woler line SEW 1981 Zig Zag sewing maPllnoir ID-1141 CO'IIJ.21!2. or
Ollio.
Jl.4fe
oilldi. Henry Bahr • 1111 or chine tn lovely eablnot. Auto1JiP1J In ......,. at Melli Gen- &amp;cor Bohr . . . . . Z.7.Jtltp matlc
zig zag to ...,. on buteral Jloopltal. Dl West SeeNamed Key1
'"""· make buttanltoles, mono.ru&gt;E
OUT
cleaner
ill
a
new
Ponce
de Leon discovered
GIItl 81.. """"""'·
:l-2541c
«"1111 and laney detiltll bv
the
Dry
Tortugas.
He called
cllomlcal. It's fast. easy and
turning a single dial. Left In
ltOI1I'Z MAN, IJilOd ntary and · eCOIIOIDical. Rent a well
these keys the Tortugas
layaway and never used. Pay
1Spanish for " turtle" 1 be-.nfalon, ABC Cleaners,
cleaner. fl. Baker Furniture.
off SSII.IO or tenns tl .25 week- cause of the many turtles in
.c-, W. VI.
1-26-tk:
2-2Mfc
ly. Phone m-M.
:1-:15-&amp;:
nearby waters.

• M.lli.JU

"· o. .....,...

..

'

_....,...
· lfaaa1 ...--8al.lriot

t

aiMII . . . .
P1nanal

111,111.n1

I lt.IIJtAO
TREASUilr:tl'S liAI.ANCE
DK'DUIU 31, 11111
I Tt.l'n.a
S'HI:DULE A-tl
.&amp;VMIIABY OF CASH BALAHCU,
RECEIPTS A..'(() EXPZNDI'IVKD
Balane• .laD. 1. 1 Genua! . . . . . .
I lf.IM.U

IG.IOt.41

hnoul~

IIJ.IIUI
a.:a3.03

..... .. ..
s.m.-

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

'

...

0""- l•lm.
aad

w..., . . . .

~

,_,

.. ,..1

...........
,.
w ..

S.n1cl---aaWW
ud ......
lkil'..... •134 Food

s.u&amp;PIDU't . . . . . • • . . . . •
a.pmn 1o l:qiiiJIIment
Otblr-IAmehroHI
f'wld . , .
• . •,

1. .

l!ond Rellrement
IJ,IIUII TOTAL ~
Lu.nebroom . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
IMt..
Ll.INCimOOK nJND .. .1 . . . .II
I.S.J:.A. Title 1 . . . . . . .
IJ.IOJJII BALAHCI:.
l....,,
:011)C81UD II, • . I tAlUI
U.IC.A. 'hUe D . . . . . .
'I'OT'AL '1'ata1 I.Jji-.: I ......:'\ , ~~ ~
Gneral
..
Wl.-..11
D~ Jl, PM
I . . . . .1t
lhwl a.unm.at.
. . .1.07 fJNiraa.: SCHOOL
Lllachroom
Q.JGII.tl 15UPI'Lia I'UNDI

~-·
111,111.11

N.D.J:.A. TWII Ill

£.8..E.A. TUM 1
U~..A. TUio U

TOTAL

. . •.. . .

.

~

Ottleral . . . . .
Bond

l,lll.tl
I&amp;U.MI.It
. . .. -.411

M.lll.et

a.un~~~nt

l.unehroom . .
.
Ullllorm lebiMal .,.,._
N.D.J! .A. Tttle Ul
!..1.8.A. 'l'ltle I . . . . . .
E.II.E.A. 11"• U

TOI'AL .... , • .

G.G53.13

I,'IU.Ie
3AIU3

•.Mt.oo

1.18t.T8
IIIUI3.1B

Btlanee Dee. :11. • •
GeDUal . . .. .. . . . .
I 11.114.81
&amp;lid Retin1M!I.t
IJ.aM.ll
lmldWoam . . • . • . . . . .
UH.Ol
E.S.II:.A. TiUe I
tAII.D
.~~:•.8.A.
&amp;1•
TOTAL
. . t 1411#rJ.II
ICIIOIMJU A-m
CASH 8~. RIC&amp;IPfB
AND UP&amp;NI'II'nJIU BY nJND
GINUM. J'UND
bALA&gt;IC&amp;.

nu. u

~~U~Y

l,U. ..

IN~U

RlllC~

Gimenl Proper\J' TUa.aJ. ......"' (GNMJ . . . • .....ft
'fua1ible Penonal
PropertJ Tu 1ar..&gt; . .
u.nut
f'OIIndtt!OD Fwl4
(OroiiU .. - •. ' . . • • • . • . •

lo'fderal Subdiii-

P.L. llo6 .. .. .. .. .. .. •

lllela of Oh»-

cappilll JIUIIM.t.l

111-"

....••
Stt\e a! Oldo--Sc:bool

Bu.

l.liiAIG

_ -

Voc:atloUI ~tloll
!:'Lita or Oldo HtDdl·

........

lll.lll.tT

~

100.00

7,flt.OCI

l'ble ol Obio-Otber

l.IIGI.IO

TJlAN.......,

TOI'AL laGINNINQ

.....,.
I

•
I

UCID'I'II .. . ,.....
J::D'mmi'I'U'RU
Purcbue If WorMIIoll

..

'*"

I J,IIUt

.........

...

..

son:

01'1.11

I

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

~

TOTAL LIABIU1'JD

II(!IIIIDUU: D
IJUII'IlAIIY or CASH BALA.NCSS.
.....&amp;IPIW AND SIPSNDm.JRD
Balaaoe .Jan. I, 11111

Cemetery ru.n4

'1'0'1'41A ...... ....... ..
'l'otal boltptt
a.MI'al. I'WWII • . .

••

111.100.00

... . . .

. ..... . . ' ..

OeMn1 l'mld .. . .. .. . .
llotor Vehielo UWIIM

.. 111,111-ft

.

c-lery Pu4 . . . . . . . .
IMI.:II
'I'Of.U..
•
•
•
.
..
.
..
.
.
.
.
.
.
....... u.c. 11. 1. . · -··

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

.....

Motor Veld.de ue.tiM

ru... . . . .. . . .. .

Comltal')'

QJOIJLU.
B.u..\NCJ:, " " " '

__

....

hnltble ...,....

......

«Gnnl) ••

I

1• ••11

DlltrtbuUon
Pa "*"-ha ..... 'hJr.

I

1.'111.11

llt.M

-

(.acanne Ueeue , _
.... hue

. . . ...
1 ........
~.~

. . ........

.....
......

(Qf'MI) ..... .

AcUuetraeAh and Jlel1uadl

•

J,'fll-lt

T&lt;'PT AL IUlCEIP'n

......-

I UI'UJ

TOTAL IIIGII'INUfO

KIK!&amp;IPti .. .. ..... -.. • . . . .
DP&amp;NDITtiUI
'I'O'l'AL ~

o\DIONift'RA.TlW

~

)'

nas Pll01'SC'ftOH

•

'I'O'l'.AL

08ANI)

~

o........,"""'

uo.to

~

~

' ·' '"

Middleport, Ohio 45760
February 2$, 1969
To the t!Wtor:

'.

,.

_,.

I .......

BAL.\HCI:,

....

~

..... BALAKal
DIDL1IIfiiiiD. b, ,... . . . . • . . . .

• 1,0'11.11

D~ I I , "TOTAL DPJ:NPrruBIII

I

•.n

IIUI

I,_.
I I.....

._...

I

.,...

I.I'CII:ND 1'.U I'VND

aALANao.

IIGtor

v....... .........

Ta:a .. .. . .. .
'JOTAL awiWII

'

...._
DoL IL

'IVJ'AL WIINOITU815-

&gt;ll.!::"'~iii ..

I I.......

1. .

. .. . . . IIIL ... ..

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

.•• . ...

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

..........

..

OUND TOTAL

I

.......

........... ..
IN......

.. •

...

-.ICI
IIUO

.........

a...DU

(COIIU

(Wut'&amp;l

Bulldiql feo.t)

_,.

fC:O.U &lt;AU.

IIJiooJ ...Mt. .

.lqaJII.tHDU

'W'I'.U. Ml&amp;'l'8
UA111Lft'1111&lt;

IOAII.OO

......

••n•
...
.8oad ........ 111_
~

I

''

IOMI

...........
. . I ......

ICWMI.a ....,

__
..,.. -....... 1-

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

8£DOi. 6 IICIUIP.

o........,,...

You- ............
1'111... Qutt&amp;ulllq
~

u.- ........

.... ., Jilt.

I

U'll. .

•

!

i

au, too, """ (. tmrclled by llle tillY cUque which r!doo roughshod

.

~a

.alter

WHERE SHOES ARE
SENSIBLE PRICED
Middloport, 0 .

1 p.m., prDYide for local option
elections for &amp;lnday sales. and
take away rrom the municipal-

PLENTY OF FREE PARKING

'" The Store With A Hart"
Right reserv•d to limit quantities

We accept Feo. Food Stamps

.....

Plus lo• • ..,,;.,~.

.... -.~-

,.;

lb. 1 9
··~

Grade A Homocenlzed

BE'ITER

·HOLSUM
· BIO~

'a Swve

ROLLS ,

,.,.

29~

MEAT BUYS!

- u:......a
.
...f It
. ··
. ......
. u••••••••••
,k..7S"'
liTO SIU

1• •

~

c;,oa-..J 'Beef ·~:.:::. :~ ••3 ~.. 1.69
95.1.
WIeners............. •••• ;;..~··
•AtiiCII CITY

· ,.

-

.StE~l
.
.,
'

I ll.trl-11

BAN

7 ... '1.00
LMteGII••• .

CARROTS
lb. ~lo
·
. '•J
.

"""' ·"- • -"·'··-·~-·....._ ;..'...·....;.~-·
•·

· · - · ·"-· ~- - ·- ...... ~

...... ~~ ~ ~· ·

\

' ' j
" '·

'

;I

\ .

'·

I

twin pack

PRODUCE VALUES
Choice Gol... Fr~lt

tell MOM

1, ....

~t.

Pride Saltine

,PoRI

.....•.,.....

&amp;iant

STOKELY'S

Fresh and Lean

.• ~

Chicken Noodle Soup

Salad Dresslne by Krall

1-

I !hero l~litte'noffa a~ AsioclatlbP, I would !Ike to-·
PlliiGeranl

... •

NORTHERN
ASSORJED

te placate ·rtaUeu YoWb&gt; .because these YOUJJ&amp; Democrat groups
are aeldom r..U,. dclml..tad by yoong - ' • (bel'"' age 2$). And
o, tor 111 tbe talki~ tor ill tbe f&amp;l•o 11Jpoals, studeitli,'tli8!1

New F.-rnlture
~($2,, ...
·~· J

sale of liquor on

e

owtr the afla_£rs •.9f IJte ·OemocraUc party. These people feed 011 the
herltoge or the Patt,y.,, They should represent tbe lniereot ol all tile
JNIOP(e but they do noti even serve thotJa who VCJte Democrat~c. 'Ibey
Hrve only themlielv._.
The travest;y otofhtended concern for youth runs even to tlae
..Uonal leveL At tier la1t ronventlm. provisions were made ror
y_.. Democrats to ...~ve representation on the Natloral C&lt;fUnit..
tee. But this, too, ia deeiPUOt'l (1:011Celved by the ,.back room" boys

3 ROOMS

........

..Jt ;

""'' ''••

tt.........

lor ru~n~r local ..,u... potltlons.
Ruuo•a bills wwtd permit

LAUNDRY DETERGENT
BLUE CRYSTALS

/ terestS · of all yoUJw Meigs COWitians, At worse, they would be no
more than . ..yes'" men lor the Chairman. for thlt reason. I mlde It
clear at the outdt that I woUld serve reluctar:tly. I Celt, m1 l feel,
tt.t at least ten ...vOWllpeople should be permitted to serve ss ildepealent Cull votinl metnbers • .
ln poiiUcs, j,f 111 fometime• a uime to think your own thoughts
and to apeak yourownnrlnd.Justasdevtla were driven trom temples,

12

.........

.........

tu.-a
Jm-..

~- . . . . . . . . -

... IJI . .

I UlUI

I

L U . _ ,.....

l

'--till•

. .Din'
, _ -WM WlliCII
_,ND
c:au.no

prevloua gubernatorial vote the
IUIDber of signatures needed

Huron Brand

I

r
·
r
..

TOTAL . . . .. ........... - - -

ANGEL TREADS
ARE HEREI
THE SHOE BOX

Moming's bUI woold inc:reooe
!rom IS to 35 per cent of the

cans1.

'

"WI\fi

l'O'I'.U. wau.mD
KXCD» 0. D&amp;o
ftCJI:NC'I ,_ M II -.tftM

SPRING~

u.....-

law a.

I

This letter 111 wlitten in reprd to an article awearlnc in the
Times-Sentinel of ~ last about the Meigs County Democrat
Executive Committee. For the record, I was to be the second young
member IP!&gt;OI~ to 1~ But I had the aadacity to ohallenge tho Jeod.crshJp of my own part;y to s~ly even one reason why anyone should
wish to be a part ~ it. I myself worked on wrlous project• over
lhe past 4'h mooths (,....,..as l non-wdngpartlclpant.), hoping to ftnd
-·
·
\ that reason.
'111ey ask for volunteers · to work BOd for funds, in return ror
which they give oothirw.
.
I said then am I a.ay now it is a .:loke an:l a disservice to all cout::erned to _pretend, &amp;l'l the article in S\INJa)''s PQer did, thlt the
Committee Is demonstrating an interest in young people by appointlrw two. It would be, at best, impossible for two to represem the in--

:do

..-.

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

'·.

,

dtool and collot!O,
not ha.. a .oleo In tile Democntlc Party,
The ·only workabi:i answer seem• to be in the toondlng of a
ftloc ...tlc Stutlent AllsoelaUon to 1111ume the role which the Party
llffra!'tlaes,. f!, ~~~~eteb lndependeni.lt shoold be ~aed
o the ldoalo. ot·. ~i1izic Porty bot should not feel obliged to
- " ~rat!cG.,.;idldote~ Each man should be Ju&lt;lpd on tbe
loio ti bfo ~
Aa .... latton
Include bf8h odloOJ and
ill• .-..,
Ill to make ~ dlotr concern&amp; and their
e.rt.sts ~ wl10 "" ·H ek action on Utero. It 4hould oot bave to
• I'm'· al\)'lbfll(. W'hin tile leaders see we are not aotlV to tlO awo,y
iii no{ gol!lfl .to •
•filii!' fllMI and \Qle tbe WIIJI ol oor IJI"'lKS,
oy wW come arOIIIIOI ._ "Ol' IIWIU be they wbo 10 ,
I
tetter.W be read'lnddtoculaed and eonsldtrod. And

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

.S.J .... .. ............

l.qulp.IIIHt

.'

~~·

1'0'1'AL a.a.INHINO
BALAN&lt;:~! PLIIII
R&amp;t!IJPI'i

IIAIN'nlf'Aift:ll

:•

I t.oot.fJ

JAHUdY 1, 1.. . . . .

Rep. Robert 1\, Mamd.ng, RAkron. also introcklced a bUI to
IIIOdft:y Ohio's
oontrot

FLOOR SANDER &amp; EDGER
BLUE LUSTRE SHAMPOOER
POLISHER &amp; SCRUBBER
WALLPAPER STEAMER

cLosED suNDAY

t .....

..

TOTAL~

risk under sickness and accident Insurance contract a and

Open Mon. thru Sat.
9 to 9

.

L ftU .

BAJAN"CII PLUB

~nday

FEB. ll, 28, MAR. 1

~
:I,

........
......
.........
.........
·.........
. ........
.
... ..
.
.
...
........
.... - .....
......,.. .......... ......
. .......,...,... .............., _.. ...........
. ..........
.........
.
.
.....
,...
....... ......
Other ................. ..

permUting

Our Better
Ful-Valu
.Buys ~··•
Holsum Bread.~iilil~A:•••• 7 }!a:~ 1. o·o..
Camp beII s•••••••••••••••••• 7 00
•1
k
Evap. MI •••••••••••••••• 7 ~:5 1.00
Best Dog Feed Meal ••••••••• ~.lb. 1.49
Easy .ndaY••••••••••••••••••lf• .39e
d
p
h
Sl 1ce eac es•••••••••••• 3 ~~52% &amp;9e.
Toilet Tissue •••••••••••••• 4 ~~. 29~
•
4
91iracle Whlllee•••••••••••••••~=• ~
Crae kers •••••••••••••••••••••••••,bo. 'i
•l
k
89
Prod • M1 ••••••••••••••••••••c~•· . ~

.,

.......

...........

Tu CO.--)

at

s.1Jes.

Prices Effective

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

OeMnl Pl'll..,. 'I'U&amp;eal _..,. RJro.&gt; . . I t,m.M

ll~or

•••

....

I 1,110M

m.l'l'

IAHVAaY J, ,__ . . . . I

aimed

RENT IT

bill ~aranleelng toll ~
and recompense for insured

5TH and PEARL STS .• RACINE

329 North Third Ave.

l#fl.lll

'I'O'l"AU ............. " I l.llf..,
&amp;CIIaltU m

scllecklled today .
The Senate was to vote on a

}}ills were introWced .
Rep. !\nthoo,y J . Russo, DCieveland, offered three Dills

Anna Etldno,

l

~-

....... .......... . .,....
·· ·· ··· ·····
GuollDI 'ha rur~o~~.
. • • . JAI'7,1f
a....~

DI5CIIARGE1J :

~

::u:

..... -..

=:.":~

re110lutions

also adopted three
Th:esda,y, and 17

Pullin, Pl. Pleasant.

:1;

, . . ..~..

'l'.a. ..... . .. '. .. ·.• ... .

J;ou ~~e

Pleasant; Dorothy Jean Sargent,

-~

.........

hour• ror liQX)I' aalea.
Votes on SihecWe
8oth houses had noor vote1

BUll and ne801utlw.a

···catabl·

menlall,- ,......,.
for "'slow lea.mtJrc" • • •·

Rock CasUe; Mrs. Ttvls Eugehe
Sargent, Rock Castle; Beverly
Bird, pt, Pleasant; Mrs. Holley

~

I I,I'IOM

aion.
The

IJou.se votes were &amp;Dt on a
bill to count part..time pupils in

Illes tbe rtl!lll I&lt;&gt; aot etooln1

utiiWes cornmls-

""""'""' n!r:lliiiiOI ..

llrivtr led ..,. a !!lo; I
mont to Ohio law oubiiMLtMJ

VALLEY HOSPITAL

........
...... ·'·:·
I • •.11

p.~bUc

OVOfOll&lt; dally - - ...

-

Feb. 25, 1969
ADMITTED: Marie Fowler, Pl.

'~d
.'

_...__.

TO'l'.AL8

PLEASA~'T

·.·1

,.-......

state

proporv ......

Edler, Clyde E. Hanks, Mr:a. c.
Edward Hawley, Miu M a b e I
N. Hrsell, Lee S. Johnson, Miss
Ruth Maddy, Mrs. Charles E.
McDaniel , Mrs. Della M. Moll han. Mrs. Ernest J. Morris,
Brenda L. Phelps, Mrs. Bessie
A. Plummer, Mrs. William D.
Watkins, Mrs. G. Floyd Tho~
as .

au.-.. -,'

1.-.111
&lt;~•m•tert" ,..... . . .
1.1JI.JP
TOTALI . ........ ,, .... - - ·
Total Reeetpl.l .1: Bl!lallcee
CkoiMrnl ..... ···••···· · . .........
Motor Vehlcle Ut!e.,..
...... hll4 .... .. .... . .
o.-.u
&lt;.•.oliM Tu FUnd . • . . IJ,lii.IT
801111 ud lftbl l'aDd
~meten ru~

'I

......

'

n.-.01

J'ud
a-t aad Brldp J'un4
Tu:

. . . . . .,

1\urlcss, 1~-IJowling Green, preThe three senatora who vc;Qd
Sen. Oakley t.:. couw, n~
dicted adoption of the re10lutlon Ironton, chief epon110r, said U aplnst the bUt did not particiby the ~essary threrHlrthl was • 'time ror Ohio to take a pate In the floor debate Tues(60) vote,
lle.P forward. ...
dly. Those opposed were : Sent.
, .. It probab!y wtJ I l)&amp;JI the
••J hope the Senate will have James K. LeeQy, R-W001ter;
llouee," Kurfesa sald. "I'm not the ~rage to glve the yruth Harry L. Armstrtq;", R-Logan,
ba1ing that prediction on any of Ohio eontideration," he add- and Robert R. .!ilaw, R-Colum.PBff.icular poll just on a ed.
bua.
lrunch."
Sen. Charles J. Camey, D..
While Senate action was highSimilar )3UI Failed
Youngstown, Senate minority lighted by the voting age reiOThe l07th General Assembly ~der. favored the resolution, lutlon Tuesday, the !louse sent
considerod a similar rei!IOiution bUt added, uThe challenge ill back to L'Ommittee tor lurther
whloh passed the Senate 25-11 not to us ••• but to the young study a bill designed to change
only to die in the House Go¥. peaple of the state. I( they go lour legal holidays to Mmda¥.
enunent Operations Committee. about it In the wrong way, they
The re-referral came on a 63Senators 1\aesday spent more will loae the right to vote in 34 vote.
than an hour debating the reRD- November."
Representatives passed two
lutlorl before the rOll eall.
ilcrease Voters
other bills Tuesday. One wculd
It adopted by the nouse and create a probation bureau in
given a majority vote in the the Youth Commission's comgeneral election, the resolution muni!;)' services cHvision, 1be
would grant some 300,000 young other would eliminate a requirepeople (19 and 20 year olds) the ment for railroads to rue intervoting franchise.
state freight rates with the

Leon; Edward Lewis, Pt. Pleasant; WUUam FU1011, Pt. PleasF. Chandler, ~aJI. Chapman, ant; Walter Grinstead, New HaDeldra Sue Califf, Carl Davis, ven; Millie &amp;tmmerlln, Silver
Mrs. James A, Debruhl, M r s. .!ttrings, Maryland.
BIRTH: Mr. and Mro. Ctfl,
Kemeth L. Dem.pqt, . Mn. Ar-1
ford
Hart, Leon, a son.
thur R. Duckworlh, Marion ~.

. . . ..11

a a.m.n

llotor Vlldel• Unn.u
TU hDd .. .. ... ....

c-u..

. .......

....
.
.
.......
......
····"
.........
"1"'

CJeDen1 Faa4
'
Mcator Vllb.J.cle Uetnee
TU had ... . ..... . ..
O..OUDe Ta11 f'Wid
. . . . . . . BdQe J"Ud

lnhei'HIInce

I

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

I UU.17

.. ..

t.'fiUt

t

IM.ID.fl

,__

BIID'I'
11, 1111

n.can•

Pr••II'V" Tu

I

......
.....

B.\1..1\H(Z

c-.

R&amp;C .......

8ALA.NCZ PLUS

....,,._.

rotm.

Llatt

c.ua

toll

T_ _.. .. Clerfl
ICIIJtDtu I

Tu

.......... .
14.1.111.•

P,

~- ~

Atlfntssions
•
J\lblicati(Jq. of admissions Is
f aupeoded uqtU further notice.
'
[ Bittlls.
Mrs. Ra.Y 1;;.t MeQiire, Rt.
1 Patriot, 1 50~ 6:0~ a .m . Tues41$; Mrs. ' Ro~ Wimer, JackJOn, dau~~t 9:39 a.m. Tuesday; Mrs. Dorald C. Roosh, Rt.
3 Pomeror.
11:19a.m. 1\lesda.v; Mrs. Janies R. Burnem,
· Rt. 2 Racin~, daughter, 12:50
p.m. 1\leaday; 1tfn. Robert L, ·
Matters, 23 Befger Ave., son,
3:2S p.m. Tuellclay.
.~ Diacluwges
Michael S. 8"1\0Y, Rodney G.
Beaver. Dmald Burchett, James

CMOllae Tldl had
Road aad Brtdp

u.-.u

COUNTY OP . . . ..
P, 0 , A4illnM lt. 1 .....h'llll, Otlle
D.to , .._ ,., " "
thll fon.:..ta, npor1 te

......w.

~

OeMrel hnd . . .
Motor Vehiele LiCWIM

. . . . ... 1

._,.

· W8rd.

Mr. Otl..

UABILITIU

. ........

llllllllnt

J¥CIIcal Center • First
Ave. Vlat~ _hOurf 2-.4 and 7..S
p.m. Ptu'\11tt 'only on Pediatrics

(AOUft lUll JueUft)
Uo.Jft.IO
J.. u : a.oeb 0\lttt.ncUn,
JN.tl
N•t P'U.Ddt oa DQIOd • .
IJAIIf,ll'
TOTAL ASBTS
S ,..,_,_.,

111.-.lJ

1NI
IASTIIN LOCAL ICHOOL DIITIICT

ON THE ABOVE
HENRY a.ELAND
Office IIZ'UI
Reo.---

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

.•

"NANCIAL
UMI.RIPOIT
- ·OP TNI
MAID 01' IIDYCATION
.,. .,

re&amp;Olution went to the

Hciuae \"dlOY ,00 ,wao ,OXP&gt;eted
to: be mov"'!/ Into I COMm!llee qulokJY' to 1101 !he lsoue
~k to the House . noor Jfor a
Yale.
'
'
House Spieker Charlea F.

Dllpoelktl7 Balanel!ll

.. .. I 1.-.11

••••

'

·

euUII U.. tollowlal nton

All!lftll:
Cllllb OA Bud ......

........

lnsur•nce

Dice...., u-.

7~

0' TOWtQHIH
,., PIINI Y..r IINIIfll
DNI!IIIMt 11~ INI
IUnGN TOWNSHIP
COUNTY OP Mltel

I • .111-lil'l

• lUOO.to

,.,

con. .tutlOaal

amendment 30.:f.l
:1 was tile Jtrongesl vote o1
~~~Prova I a voting age bl ri has
ever obtained in the- Geperal

ueAI. NO'I'fCI
PfNANCIAI. IINIT

lll.tll.05

RADIO and TV repair, lioase
ealfs, and anleimu btstallod.
Joltn Harrison, PhoJto .._
S2l
!H-Ifc

9922-26.'111&gt;

tHt·

"16 E. Molo POIIieroy, 0.

........

C!GARE'M'E vondln~ miiChfand service. ABC Enterprlseo,
Mason, W. Va. Pbone 773-IMJ.
U.!fc

can

for ·

r. • .., H••• &amp; Alii

J

RODNEY-03 HONDA, 300 Dream, recently C)verhaulcd, $275. Phone
Raymond Rowe after 6:30 p.
m. 217-2270.
I-7J6.3tc

The

-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992-2094

M:NIA'IVRE

22114. Tbe Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. Authori!ed Singer Sales
and Service. We Sharpen
Sclsso....
l-2f.lfc

olYliorl

ss.ss

Business Services

ary shots and wmlll!d. Pbone
alter 3 p.m. weekdays, 11111·
:IIIZII, Hockingport, Ollio.
:l-15-1otc

t

..... All1•••nt

Opoo Til 6 Daily

WlliDSCJR ......,, ll'al1er; ·4JI!il. ROI!isi EttER, Broker
80 • 12 feet; Pbone IIIIJ.2'1l111; MIDDLEPORT IIVSINESS For sale or take over payGond Income and opportunity Ui!!llonn lcllool SQp11u
l.fU.ll hlJCmPTS-.J.NOOIR
3.118.13 &amp;ale of 'Woftbeob
ments .
1--c
for Couple. Be independent N.D.E.A. Tit.ll IR . . . . . .
~.I . J:.A. nu. I . . . . . . . . .
IUIUl TOTAL aa:&amp;IP'l"a-lnd gel IOilleWbere. Fine kJ. i:.I .I .A. Tltll II
1_.,1.11
INOMII: . . . . • . . . . . . . .
TOTAL
. . • . . . . . . . . . . . I Fl M tt RJ!ICEIPTS-TaANa'I:U
eatioa.
~OOOil HAY, lint ml Total ReeelpU! .1: 8~
r.o. Chaanl . . . .
........
TOTAL ~
CUU!ng, 10 cento bote. Homer EAsr MAIN - !2,0110 oquare O..nl . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
llond. R.UreiMDt
JB.Iti.D
~ , , . . , , ....
feet of bulldlnc spoee 1or • ~ • • . . . . . . . .. . .....lfi , OTAL l\&amp;C.SIPTII
'trUlar4, PhoDe - ·
l.TII.ll
CINCOIQI AJIID
l-20-41tp
new business. or relocaUon . Uniform 8cb.ool SUpPUet
MODERN 1 ROOM house . bath.

-

CJl io.-..lag .Ofilo'i "llot.
age moved dOle~ to tl1e
November IN. !lot ..Tue~ ,when
the state - ~ ~ li res.

UPERT

SPECIAL
SHOW TIRE SALE

Mer.

992-2181

PebForSale

floors, room for 4.

(IJPI)

CJ~tllllon

Assembly.

Jack W. Canoy,

:1-25-«c

:t~et~

l HOOM bouse wilb bath, fur-

nished on Union Ave. Uutiues

••.

rooms, 3

COLU MBUS

B.usiness Servic

HOMELITE
DIRECT DRIV~

has other intererbl.
CALL FOR INFORMATION

gas,

BLAETINARS

ELOCTROLUX vacuum cleaner complete wltil attaehmonla,
paint spray, API&gt; oordwlnder. Loob and eleans Uke new.
Pay off balim&lt;e rll I payments at $8.50 mnnlbly. P1tone

SO TO 100 ACRE FARM with

111115 CHEVROLET Impala two.
door honl tup, !27 auk&gt;matle,
power steerlntJ and IJnk,es.

ltiiO OLDS, must sell, mmen

RUBY PETERS
ON PIANO
I 'Jr, Illite OR Bass

lliEAT RUGS right, tbey'll be
a delight if cleaned wltil Blue
Lustre. Rent electric sham$1 . Baker Furniture.

For Sale or Trede

4-31'-tfr

DANCE
HOTEL MARTIN

@

ForS.Ie

SOMEONE to live in and help
with housework , Pbone COOl:
ville, 667-3319.
2.-26-ltc

the many kindnesses extended to us at tbe dealb If
Employment Wanted
our beloved wile and mother.
Mn. Cora May Carman. We Ct!ILD CARE for working mooholl aiWBys n!mell\ber y0111'
thers. Pttone 992-5853. 2--p
-..onderful jldl of kindness.
Famll)!: of WilHam A.
Wanted To Buy
Carman and William
T. SOUIIII&gt;y
2-lJS.Itp ANTIQUES, dlsheo, furnlluro,
china Cllbinets, old pboooNotice
R&lt;BPhs, clocks, rnloc:. Leo

REVlV Ai at Plants Momortal

1 owner cor.

6 cyl., std. trans.., white with blue interior, 22,000
actual miles . Good one!

Po~p~~!!s.~~~ Co.

Y••, W• H••• Th"'

111117 HONDA leG series with
winchl!teld. Very flOOd conclltloo, reaaonably priced. Call
ti!IZ-'11118.
l-ll-3tp

1966 CHEVROLET IMPALA CON .......................$1795

OFFIC( HOUAS
1 :30 ' ·"'· to 5 :00 p .111. Dollv
I1JO ,o .m. '" 12:00 Noo11 $oh.wdoy

111:1!: JIIIDGL!R Building

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

o,,

ts

inlr

For Sale

bUt I&lt;&gt; hike the mul·
..... .......,. CJl
ages Incurred b.Y a minor whlcll
cOUld bo rceoYorod In a clvU
Mttimt qaiast parents.

Se"'afe Is 30-3 for Reducing Voting Age

• ·- The Dally Senllnul, Mlddleporl - Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 26, JH69

A LI'ITLE 'HOMEWORK' Watching Want ft.ds Brings Top Grade

.....u.or

'

~,

�II ·· 11oo Dolb' -inol, lllddl ....... - P..,.roy, 0., Feb, ZG, 1969

•

Congress Braced to Meet Black Lung Issue
II)' IIARG ARET A. KILGORE

WASIIINGTON (\JPO - After- week• f1l blUer chlrsea and
counter-chlrgea tou;;ltM;f off by
the deaths of 78 c:-oaJ mlrscn. in

West Virginia lut November,
Corcres&amp; Is ready co consider
tougher health arQ salec.y stand-ards for the rw.ttoo's HO,OOO

miners.
Probably not aince the 1920s
and 1930s, when Jofln L. Lewis
was i.n his heyda} organizing
the t.:nhed Mine Workers Union
(UMW), has publi c sentiment
ao loudly proclaimed the-. acttoo must be taken to improve
the miner's lot - and to save

At i.&amp;aue arc the -warent
ne1.'d foe tougher federal rontroll on u!ety sllrdanb W"ithln lhe bituminous mines and
mone) lo stud.) how to
dise~s.e

cur~

the

calledpneumo-.:oniosis-

known more l·ommonlyas ''Blal·k
Lung. •• The condition Is caused
b;J. miners' breathill!: the nne
coal dust generated when «aJ is

bllated out ol the earth. It afor the
work force,

fects about 10 per ceot

There llre differing views whether Congress shoold pass two
separate bills - one on health
am one on safety - or rom·
biDe the problems into one
his life.
strong aUack with selling powe r
However, coal producers, the in Congress.
union, medical experts, conCommittee ~ens Hearings

greumen and the miners tllemaelves are divided over the best
melhoCht ol improving conditions
in the nation's highest-risk busi-

The Nhon Administration has
not yet made its recommendations on legislation. But pre-sumabl) the President will act
ness.
wht!n a Senate labor subeom·
A Iota! of 309 L'. S. mme rs mittee open.o; heari~s Thursd8J .
dled ill 1968.
A House labor subcommillee begins hearings Man·h 4,
Collapses Killed 99
In announdng the Senate hearThe largest number of deaths,
199, resulted from collapses or ings, ."ien. Harrison A. Williams,
roof, race or mine ribs. The D-1\. J., who will head them, obnext-ranking killer, gas and dust senL-d: ''The histof) of mine
eJQ&gt;losions, took 88 lives , indud- safely legislation a n d reguill!: the 78 at Manninw:on, W. lar ion has been written in the
aftermath of recu!Till!: traged)
Va.
West Virginia, the nat ion' s and this ode must be broken."
lie said the trouble with the
biggest coal-prOOucing stale, alt;nited
States is thai it "over·
so registered the highest numreacts" after tragedies, rather
ber of deaths - 150 men.

Plan Covered Dish Dinner
P'T. PLEASANT - :\ covered dish dinner for members and
their families of the Woman's
Club of Point Pleasant will be
held preceding the March 14

meeting.
hb's.

0.

L.

FitzRandolph,
chairman of the club Ways a n d
Means committee, announced the
dinner would be held at 6:30 p.
m. in tht Moose Home. Each
member ts asked to bring a

committee are : Mrs. Clarence
Anderson, Mrs. Joseph Antal,
Mrs. John Brown, Mrs. Wilbur

Dickson, Mrs. T. R. Friar, Mrs.
Gordon Jackson, Mrs. William
Knight, Mrs. Kush Krodel, Mrs.
Loula Lewis, Mrs. Homer Lowe,
Mrs. Gary H. Rayburn, Mrs.

Beryl Russell, Mrs. W. s_ Selby, Mrs. John Smith, .Mrs. Charles H. &amp;one, Mrs. A. F.. Thomas, Mrs. William Wellman and
Mrs. Leslie Williamson.
Mrs. C. H. Fisher, of t h e
Ways and M~s Committee, anllOlUlced that a rununage sale will
be held on March 7 and 8 and
March 14 and 15 in the Rardin
Building oo Main &amp;rset, former .
iy the Republican Headquarters,
between the hrurs oi 9 a.m. and

covered dish and each commit•· tee chairman Jrill notify members of their committee to bring
a certain food.
The dinner meeting will be
presented by [he Department or
f\Jblic Affairs, with Mrs. W.
M. Crnickshanks, chairman, and
Mrs. C. G. Adler co ~chairman
in charge. other members or the 4 p.m.

than pro\'ldirw sufficiert preweDtive efforts.
Rep. Ken IIechier, D-W. VL,
said "Both the Congreu an:l the
state legislatures have been 1'10torlousl)' negligent In writing
strid mine safety laws. "I cer~
t.Ainly .1m guill,t for not j~~
ing up and down sooner. I was

lakon In b)

die loud noloeo

remlnd me of the newbor, bull
caU which eJecta to Callow his
~ther rather thin hla mother
and does not realize his~mtstal4
George J. Tiller, UMW Inter· until reeding time ...
national vice president, remlndHe added that tht UMW bas
iJW Hechler that the union has been fighlift8 for better mine
alwa,ys bet.lfl one of tUs cam- corxlitions !or more than half
paign contributors, wrote, "You a century, but the issues are
COIJl)lex.
Uectller his won sqJpOrt from
a groop ol West Virginia and
PeMsylwnia doctors who seek

Haiti Culture Explained

ciety of Cbristian Service met
at the home ot Mrs. Brenda Merritt, New Haven, in ita February meeting.
Mrs. Ada Clarke, president,
introduced Mrs. Hanlmwhowore
a dress with scenes representing life in Haiti, embroidered in
beaulirul &lt;-'Oiors.
She brought out In her talk that

\'egetables are washed in tllat
country with soap and water due
to the un.sanltary condition of the

soil.
Doth Rev. and Mrs. Hanlon rep-

resented, "Little Mrica.., at a
missionary meeting, which they
attended in Huntington. Mrs. Eunice Hart led in prayer,

atate and federal assI stance to
adequately compensate miners
afflicted with black lung, and
their tamilies.

with disease, Ordy Permsylvania, VIrginia and Alabama recog·

DUST &amp; ASHES DUO nize
ice Hart, Wilma Blake, Franres Oliver, June Burns, Irene
Justis, Freda Henry, Frances
Wood, Reverend Bernice Winkler, Mabel Johnson, Ada Clarke,
Erma Roush, l..aurene Lewis,
Edith Fox and guests, Ruth Ann
Roush and Mary Roush.

"black tung" •• a compensable ailment.
Among coal producers there
is resistance to the legislation
because as an Industry spokes-map said "nobody likes to have

the (ederal go\lernment tell you

how to run your business." But
there Is a recognition that the
death raLe must be reduced.

During the business meeting,
a letter of thanks from Beckley ChUd Care Center for gifts
of money and clothes was ackoowledged. The president an~
nounced the following dates to

remember: April

Observe Birthday
. PT. PLEASANT -

j,_

-

"' O&lt;ll'nlpled ply. .
eel -~ 3 ft. Wide and 9
11. lone from tho COilVOYOr bolt
a""' oi tile Unlm Carbide mine

at ElmW'OOcl.

w. va.

-t

The JtleeU are valued at apProximotet.v $4 per
and
... re die proper\)' or tile Gal4
Manufacturing Com"'"" a1
Fairmont, w, Va. The theft
Occurred between late Frida,y
nlglrt and ~ morning,
This Is the seeond timea'J.Iantlt.y ol the galvanized sheets
have been . eported stolen from
the .same area

ot

beln&amp;

Plono....,

AmerlNo. 2ll and the
Amorlcan Legion 'liXIilor7 ror
- . p i - by the

the celebration or the 50th birth-

do&gt; ol die American Leaton. A
dinner lo plomod In comeedon
With It, SllOI1oored by the Auxiliary with Mrs. Margaret McKimey in charge on March 15 at
the Legion home.

STORE HOURS
MONDAY
thnl
SATURDAY

The Legion wao rounded In
March 1919 arwd the SOU!. amJ ..

Annual ~nnej

lOA.M. to
9P.M.

the m i n e

Dance Plalt:ifed

·~))::;~::::;:.-::::::::::::::::::~:::·:·:·

Junior Patrolmen
league will Meet
PT. PLEASANT Point
Pleasant CICy Police Chief .Jflck
Pyles aMOWtced the regular
monthly meeting of the Jr. Pa ..
trolmen'a League will be held
Friday, Feb. 28 at 7:30 p.m. in
the Krodel Park clubhouse.
A short business session will
be held followed by movie11 to
be shown. Mrs. Maxine Nibert
and her helpers will serve rerreshments. Members of the Lea-

gue are asked to wear their unl~
forms to the meeting and any
prospective members are invlt.
ed.

POINT PLEASANT -

The an~

SUNIAY

rual dinner and danceol'thePolnt
!'loasant Civic Clubs Will be held
Saturday, March 1 11t the local
Moole Hall. Clubo partldl&gt;atlng
in the amual event are the Ja,ycees, Lions, Kiwanis and Rotary.
Undsey Hedrick, chairman of
the am\1&amp;1 event said tickets are
now avaUable from club members.
The dinner 11111 begin at 7p.m.
lollowed by the dance from 9 p,
m. unW 1 a.m. Mu's tc tor dancIng wUI be !urnlshed by die Twlllghters. Both are public. As
part of the dinner program, rnem~
bers who have gone beyond the
llne Clf duty in clvtc iderest.s
will be honored, Hedrick eald.

r

1
CHECK THE ADDRESSES IT BOnOM
OF PAGE FOR HECK'S STORE
IEIREST YOU!

the Annual C'.onference in Christ

FOOD SALE

Cburch, Charleston, March 27,
District meeting.
A collecti.oo or $17.15 was taJ.ien and given toward expenses of
"Dust and Ashes," a team of
young ordained ministers, bringing God's word ln song to youth
d Mason Count.y in Clifton United Methodlst Church.. The group
also gave $5 to the Heart Fund.
Mrs. Merritt Invited guests
to the dining room where re·
rreshments were senred to Eun·

C t'

HAMILTON BEACH
PORTABLE MIXER

A ' " 0 ' - . - ........ .,_.lhtl ~..

~

• L11htwelt;ht and powerful
• ltf'lt n0n·sp1uh beateJS
-positive beater ejector
• Guarantee provides free
rtpelr tnd parts exceptlna:

~
I
I

.

r··

•

I

#

MIX OR MATCH · ·

10POUNDS

GEIEIAL ELECTRIC

CHARCOAL

10. P17t1

FM-AM PORTABLE

RADIO
I.

'

This trim little toke-along portable pocks
a big listening punch for its size. full·
fidelity FM and sparkling clear AM puh
you in touch with your favorite mvlic
and neWt. Solid·stat. de~ign.

•

••••••••

Frozen

Food

IIMILAI fO llWSJ.

fAMOUS
IIAND
IIMILAII'O
ILLUIJ.

l'-JOJ.} oz. cans

Hilton' .. -

Special!

Oyster Stew.•••.• SJ

Crinkle
Cut

_
.. ..

Regular, Drip or Elec. Perc. CoffM

Maxwell House

FRENCH
FRIES
5 lb.
bag

.

MODIL

s

'

I
I
I
I

cans

Big SwinQer freezes big oct'on .
You ne'tiW have to focuJ ... tull •wing
it up and shoat.

stretchers!!

.

5-14 tz. bots. $1

Nighttime . . . and
your outdoor holiday fun continues
with Coleman lanterns . . . world's
best·known day-

17

-·············
~
a
303

.hoot.

OMIMANTLE

cord set and dtmtge due
to misuse, when returned
to one of our tuthorlzed
service stations listed on
product 1u•rantee certificate.

BIG 3 STORE

Come on in and meet the Big Swinger
with the big 31.4 "•.t"" p'cture.
Built-in photometer tell• you when to

COLEMAN
LANTERN

• New tneloled tland1e with
3·1t)Hd eontrol

At Your Nelghllorhooll

SPINACH
SAUER KRAUT
CUT GREEN BEANS
GREEN PEAS
CORN ~=~LREE~~Rs~~iE
TOMATO CATSUI

to

PRICES IN

DELMONTE

17 and 18th

CALL 992-2635 TODAY

:, local procram will bt

cor

&lt;111 Legion -

construction.

Tbe doctors have been supported by the miners themselves.
The miners have been staging
wildcat strikes a.-:1 marches on
the West Virginia Capitol at
Charleston to put pressure on
the h..-glslature to provide compensalioo for miners afflicted
Mr . ,.at• IIJ a11d Mr. MOOf•

PT. PLEA&amp;\Hr - 1..o&lt;aJ
Poll&lt;e ore lnvelllipll~g
die theft "' 'PPr&lt;lllinalel.v 45

a-te

Crom the eJPertL I thought they
knew what the,y were doing."'
Union Take• Inue

NEW Hi\ VF.N - Mrs. Keith
Hanlon, Letart, a returned mis~
slonary from llaitl, presented an
interestln8 program and displayed beautitul art work from that
C'OUJitry ffhen the Woman's So-

versat)' wiU be ceJebraled by
4g1on J'l&gt;ltl throuafioul die United Sla.. o North IS. t•lnal plano

legion Gn.uJll' to

lb.

WOODEN

73~

ltfe

I r•

MIRROM0104

ComfottaW. cot fiMit toWs -patftr far
...,,.. ond troiiJPIH'flftl. Cot .. 25"•76"1117'
high wilt! frotrle of high grodt OGle. PaiftfM
..... broces ... o.nt.r . . ~ •dra

Charmln lothraom

Tissue. ••••• 4
Hi- C. •••••••3:::.·· 1. 00

9 CUP PERCOLATOR

m.tgth. tt.cr.y whiM dvdt (O'fllt with all a,towt • ._. t.:Jpt wound to pre•nt ripping an:d
teorillg.lt.plac9abl. Hip-on co-.

roll ..

No ljghts to watch, no dials to set.
Automatically keeps coffee drinking.hot, without reperking. Polished alum inum.

Orange, Grape &amp; Orange Pineapple

69~

Delicious Good Grade

ZEBCO 33

COliAGE
l-Ib. 331CHEEIE········ ....~~
.,

g&amp;
c
99

BANLONKNIT

_...,.•Mod

N.w IIIOCW 33 1ighMr In
waight and qu!Mer in odion

IRAIL VALUE $1

c...plooo-Ellduthre z.bco fltttd t"-0
comrol. Wligtlt I~ OUftCIK.

·~·10t-

Cell

~IJN~i_ SHOIT SLIIYI

REEL

NEW CABBAGE

ICE
CREAM

Cr

125 . .. of • •• '"' ....._.

mo-tlhw.

-----

SHIRTS

IDAIL YALUI $6.00
C•owNodo

• Auort.d CaloA

$

Sizes S, M, L, XL

Florida VItamin Rlcll

ORANGES

~oz.

39e
N0.2290

FREE
ESTIMATES

AT BIG 3
MARKETS

QUALITY

WORK

BIG

Shop The One Nearest You!

WE CAN SERVE YOU WITH THESE SPECIALTIES:
KITCHEN CARrETING
INLAID LINOLEUM
WALL- TO-WALL CARPETING

Fresh Calla Style

ZEBCO
ROD
AND
REEL
AMDICA'S MOST POPULAI COM81NATION

&lt;

SONS

PORK ROAST

.•22 WITH
RifLE
SCOPE
nP..O, MOUNT
Four power rillescope witlt solid
ba .. .!ip-aff mount as an 111'-l!rol
part of it.. KOpe. . Rugged~
Durable. Designed lor ,hard u...
Model202.41
•

lb.
•'

Fresh, Lean Sliced

MAY WE SERVE YOU? CALL US TODAY!

INGELS FURNITURE
992-2635

Easy Terms Arranced

MIDDLEPORT

PORK STEAK
,,~

~~m-..:::.::g~J$1f~~i!W'&amp;.::Y..i

3 :·R. 1.59

Ra-Carn Lean Streaked

606 Zebco Roel
All melal construction
Smooth wide-range drag
Complete witllline
6' two pieat h'ber

.s11011rod

·78

$

99

PUCOPLAiliC

40QT.
SWING TOP

COWMI•A
PLASTICS

BODICE SET

liN

$

Ro......

To

Lloll

pi&amp;ft'Y •o• ·

Qllllllll!" '

3.9C

,.' '
I

•;·:: .

RIIIJI

Sli·CED BACON
lb.

.,,·,·;

'

•
•
•
•

'
'.

'
•

,

MI. 111M1 A¥AUal AT.AIL UICA,_ ggpw II

�.
- ..
.

.

. -·

WI IUUVI THI liGHT
tO LIMit QUANflfiU

. -.

.-

WTI

I EFFECT lOW TlniCII-AY Ill. 2, lHt-01

STORE HOURS
MONDAY

NATIONAL

thru

9' x9' TENT

IATUitDAY

lOA.M. ••
9 P.M••

40QUART

ICE CHEST-,

e Outside Suspension frame
e Nylon Screen Door and

- IW' IT
"f..IN'T

SUNDAY

1·· 7
CHECK THE ADDRESSES AT BOnOM
OF PAGE FOR HECK'S STORE
JIUREST YOU!

SOI L ~UT

THIS' ....'!

27
IACH
OA~

HIPWELL

e Perfect lor

Can be u..d for WQielproof·
ing und mildew-proo,flng wt:h
it•m• 01 larpaulint A COfiVOt
· tents , boot coverings and
deck coverings. One . uallot~
coven approximately 100 sq.
.
ft. GrHn or Clear .

COLEMAN

camping

• Operates on
one 6 volt
battery.

2GALLOI

ANGLER 2 PIECE
FISHING ROD

..

PICIIC

JUG

. . . $2 9 7
e Two piec:e fib.r glatt

~~::;~~.· ~

o 3 &lt;hn&gt;mo-platod gu;doo
and tip

#5502

$599

$

Don't Min Thil V•luel

REBEL LURES

CAMP TOOL

~;~~mpor• \~
shovel, saw and
wood handle
camp axe.

,
1

.,

'I

4QUARliCE BUCKET
ltTIOFOAM

'

;

t.Eir!&gt; f'I.A'/

CHI

TENT

PORTA-LAMP

set consistinv of

GPDW
lt.J NO

DUIAILESniOFOAM

Wihdow
e Zippered Door
e Sewed in Floor
• Steel Stokes

c

77
GAL.

COLEMAN
FUEL
I GALLON

$ 10

Assorted CalorJ
and Sizes'

I

,.

. -1
~

i

htra comfort boot of 100%
waterproof rubber out..- lhell
· with odjustabl• hi.p and knee
hornell straps. fully ¥ulcanized
-ttmi·hord toe.

FOLDING

STOOL

FISHING

LARGE
LB. SPOOL
FISHING
LINE

$6!!.

'
I
•
CREEL

Rub~rized doth fishing
creel wilh 2 individual
.nop pockets.

CHOICE OF 6-11·10

12·15-:Z0.2HB. TEST

s 12

EVUUDY

rusa.r
lAnDIS

OfiiDI

GOLF
Automatic, teN-opening.

Windproof. Comes in 3
color panel design.
27'' • 10" rib.

DAILY, CROSSWORD

KING SIZE BELT

"'D'' SID

2FOR

BAIT
BOX
e
e Molded of oHroctive

jet 0'""· crulh·proof
polypropylene.
e Can't open accidentty
• V•ntiloted top

M. "Streetcar"

eharaeter
DOWN
1.lrarkot

...4~ tfttPa·~~.
~

.,

'

3. Peruna.
Indian

.prielit .

111. l&lt;ln&amp;' at

-24241

HUNTING
KNIFE
No.13919

Sporhrnen, fot Hunten, for
Hlken; for Studentt, for

S&lt;outo.

.

8 Complete Instructions with
Compo11

•- A.tno Ume :
poet.
11. Arable

"·=
-.... .._

........,,

18.kllo .

.......

nattveoven
21.-

.marU

....., ".......,..........
abbr.

U!Obln

u. Blemllh

IJ.Rio
9.Partota

23.Speab
25. Yak or

po4
30.'ftmt
diYI·

.11Uilworm

.........

IO. Polynman

211.autro.

31. PoUte
Utlt
43.Chorlsbod

e.Aoum

Clalro

31.0Uol

I CELBI

[I

anlmaJI .

41.CouteJ~

...-

ollllr.

u.....

10

CICU
1
. J I I tJ

-iT. Protecubl
!allan
til. Stl'eft:

' 27. ID&amp;etroi•·

O.k.lxe hollow ground knifeultro-delign , block and 1ilvt~r
inlay handle- black leather
theath.

up

20.1".1klmo

22. Spindle

lf. Mutem

The Compou of many uNs for

LT. Stood.

2.=... ....-...

10. Sabd&amp;nel

PI£CIS£

7" long, 3 'At" dHp

c

29~

.t.Clll08t

t.ljevotvo
5. Sate~blo'fer
•. Pebblt i

... CU1IIIlllc

SETS

IWELRYSETS
4 STYLES

Deluxe Mirror and Comb Sets, with
shatterproof mirror ~lan- a M.rry
uclusR&gt;el Beautiful ~ift boJI packa~ ­
ing ... for girls of oil a~es.

InAIL

t..a

She'll
hlce a little movie ttor in
allthit "diamond" and "pearl" high
hooh fashion ~ry found in these
ploy d,....up Mts.

lnAIL
YAWl
•••00

VALUE
$1.00

MINI BAGS

CHOICI

sse

TRACE-l-UTE

4 STYLES

:u.U..at
dol!Pt "
sa. Roup
l&amp;n

31. lJbolt.IDEt ,

........,,. I

17. Court pme

I

fO. II'Wmal&amp;

Near En• Of Sha•l•

Brl•a•

MaY

.

.... -·(

~

. ••

-~••au

.........
.,, ........ •••••"'M"'r ........ .,.._
M'mJTrr

• Ponda Sloouldor log Sot

• Puno 5ty1o Mlnl·loo Sot
e Cuto M;u Should..- lag Sot
e ho&lt;h Sl)oto Mini-lag Sot

IYHAIIINfU

A~t•..-

InAIL

YAWl
$1.00

.......

V~ Vl POK Uftla KQ SU R JI"UK·
·lni ·ooxaP DYKWOCK OI'UftKVPJif

lnAIL VAUII.I.91

=

. *1'0C8SU . -ftPftKOZU HI'RPOU
'

~-·~~~.E~~~~~·~~O~F~F~B~EE~P~A~B~K~IN~G~--.l~"~~~~~~~q~~~el~-~JO~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:_J_~-~~~~~~~-=-~·~
. 1AUAUa•••¢••oi~··--

POINI PLEASANT, Second Street

llu . . .

,

·.

~=-

'.

•

""' t

.

~ ~

ClrQtaij"*"J

T»umt

Bl·
'IU'IIL fttl~'
O'l'HZRII R&amp;D JltiU •
(0' ""-'IDOo
'~- --...
.
&gt;

. '

'

..

..

!I
1

'

.. .,_

f.

.•

&lt;

'

;

•

. ' /.f

&lt;

'-..

.

,. ;r.,

:;

'

.

..... .

.

�,., -

18 -

111o

Da111 _. ...., Mlddl_.t • p..,.ro,y, 0 ., Feb. :6, 1969

t"omet·oy, u ., teb.

~ood

Thio coup..
I« 100 o&gt;Ctra Too Valuo St'""P'
with a purchase of $5.00 or more at Kroger.

~6,

UHSV

PO EROY
KROGER
STORE

Worth 100 EX'l'BA
.
'
Top Value Sta•P.

Clip this valuable
coupon now!

llllll U.l'"'
- ~ .:JIUIWllltl
• ..... lt=IKJrL •

vN ..."-..ogelr

.

10 a.m.-7 p.m:

Get 100 Extra Top Value Stamp With Coupon

At
Pomeroy Kroger

Kroger'a
Premium Silver Platter
Copyright The Kroger Co. 1969

Pork

................n.,...... " ..... ..,.:.........
ltyto
K,..... C.., 1M

C~p,n.ht.

Cent'er
Cut
Rib

Hollywood

Spare Ribs __ ..
f'ull RHo 1to11

Pork Loin ___ ..

59c
59c

Qvortw

•••

,. .. -. •••:

&amp;it Bacon

,,., 1nJm our OVIII$

•
•••
••

•

••

___ _

'

' '

-Bread

•

•••

••

1'11. .1111 QII-

Cooking Bags

••
••

5 : :.: $1

Cream Pies 4 :::: $1

....................
u.......,-ar-..

Juice . ..:,:..~'!"--:$1.09
1~

1--.., .
-

·~

·-~

~~

•

•

.

Onioh, Rings s:.~~·$1
•

JeM'I

a... A IMIII

Pizza ----- ,.._
liiWL
59c

Round Roast _____ "'· 99c

..

394:

-

J-Ilt.-

C•• lit 0.. 0.. a.,
Clltny Drtp, .......

Cookies __ 3

'

'

Smoked Picnics _...
K._.... -

45c

= JUiCe......... 4=$l
$1

Catsup. _ 5

" - All Gofoooh Voc Poe

-

I,

K.....,.Brond

Spinach • 7 !!. $1
K.....,.lroool

Kraut __ 6 '!. $1

K--

MUHI'LORIM

Pink

Grapefruit

We're not saying "either ... or;' we're giving you
both: prices as low as our volume-buying can
make them, and Top Value Stamps.
We'll keep on adding the extra "thanks for
shopping here" with Top Value Stamps. We
chose Top Value because it's the finest stamp we
can bring you. It offers more gifts, more famous
brands ... plus the unique assurance of Top Value
Stam'ps 2-way Golden Guarantee!

Pill....., lokloo , _

= 89c

a ._,...

$Uf lbol'ol

Biscuits _ 6 .!: 59c
Cheese

Apple Sauce 8~!.81

Listerine

2 ::: 79c
K - Sllcod

Poske.r.l.Lntl

$!M IIZE ANTIHPTlC

Parkay

'!;, $1

.,.,....

•· 59c
.

SOPT MARGARINE

't:t.. $1

Coffee _____ :: $1.29

s

Vitamins :: $1.49

-lcoo
___ 2 :; $1

Pi-

a

De lbo

:z- 58c

A.M Sin R... &amp; H.T.H. VOS twr

Eggs________ .:: 39f
a- F... Coltooo

T__,.

Pepsodent _

)C ro~! Gn.d• A S..ll

K.....,.

Spray ___ ,::-,.,$1.79

.

$1 ... SIJo Com Huekor'o

Cheese · ___ ::_ 59c

Lotion ____ ~ 694:

Juice •• ~ 79c
-

U.S. No.1, Size A
All Purpose White

fU1oo

Tomatoes -------------

~

39e

Potatoes

White Onions -------- 3 INt.. 49c

25

Yams -·------------- 2 ... 39c
Sweet Com • _____ •_• _ 5 '"' 594:
llolooy

.

IIATHIIODM TJ. . .

every gift 2WAYS

.2kw11-.3ft
'
.

FREE 50

.

.,:
'
j

I
----·-&lt;&gt;'""''' __ .

·-lo 5
Tomatoes

Dm••.._ ....... v....,
"-"....
Com ------ 6 _ • $1 Cake Mix 3':;:- $1. Applesauce
6 :! $1
.,...,
K--CIIoot
Treet --··· 2 ~ 89c Ttnta •• 3 ::"- 89c Pean -2 ,...;..-.79c

ow

Roll Roast

•

'"·

" -llrlo
- v........ ,..... ,_
en""'
.

--···

99c

USDA Clloko TI-RAY OR

Crisco
3

59c

'

•

Ground Round _. •.

:Buns
~.!!!!u~!l
____ 4!:.

Wilt""'
c•••
Ellldllf•

I

$1.09

FRUM HAM -.o;u;w; -rON

4 .:.: 88c · Ice Milk ...... 2:.:' sl
!Eo;;...-.·:::s-&amp; SkTm Milk .. lo~sl

Criaco Shortening

Only Top Value Stamps

Cube Steaks __ •.

,._

•'lhortening

2-WAY
OOLDIN

--- ------

39c

USDA QIOICE -~~

K.....,.l.....

v.lue Stampa

'!1 89c Liver ___ ._

Ham ---------- •. 69c

~

....... All ......

•••ever

ProohPorlr

K,_ ....... Fully~
~ er HIH s.mt-a-1111 '

.

. ····· ••••
. •.
•• •••• ••••
•

--......

Lard ---

'--·-ltyto
Pork Roast ____

••

• •••••

•
•••
••

• •••• •
• •••
•

Fn..._ .......,.,._.1a 41

69c

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

•

•
•••

lwifl's ..,....._,. lllcM

59c

Bacon _ .. 694: COO -- -- ~~ 99c

lb.

.. .. .. ...-·
•

._ 39c Perch . _ ._

USDA CMOICI

••• •••
•••
••
•
•••
•••
••
••
•
•
•• •• ••• •
•
•• ••• •••••
••
••
•
•
•
e• ••••• ••••
II

G!k

Fvlty ~ f'llloto" ....

Dry

Sllcod

Pork Loin . __ ..

•

69c

Swtft'l .... ,..._ ...,._.

Slab Bacon .. 49t Weiners ..

Center C11t Loin lb. 79c
First Cut lb. 59c

l'ull Lolo HoH

Pork Loin .. _ ..

L--. lrn .......... ., Melt

- ------ ~- - -------··

.

-..,.~-- ··--

....... ~-·

----- .

. .

.

'

.

' --

... ' -

''
'

~

&lt;.

,.
'., t .!fl
O.

��</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="696">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11096">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="53832">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="53831">
              <text>February 26, 1969</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="457">
      <name>barnes</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="312">
      <name>dugan</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1398">
      <name>oiler</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1207">
      <name>pullins</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2062">
      <name>sauer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5">
      <name>thomas</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3936">
      <name>walsh</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="154">
      <name>weaver</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="109">
      <name>young</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
